First Run of Cornish Cross Meat Birds and Super Excited!

I totally agree with both of you. As I said in the initial post, I only ever fed the medicated feed the week before and week of hitting the ground. So basically 2-maybe 3 weeks until the feed runs out. For my meaties that was 1-3 weeks of age and for my layers it is 4-6 weeks of age. That is way low for the number of birds that I raise in comparison to other large scale producers. Since I never had a problem until I did not follow that regimen, I know that I was doing the right thing. In wanting to remove all medication from my birds, I learned the hard way that I must stick to the original plan.

The medication in medicated feed is not an antibiotic contrary to popular belief. It is a thiamine inhibitor, causes no resistance and has no withdraw period. Plus the amount in the feed is so small that all it really does is help build immunities against coccidosis.

I never had to give full blown medication to my birds until recently. The group is now healthy and being that we have 3-4 more weeks before they start to lay and a few more weeks before the eggs are sellable, there should be no trace of Corid to be found.

I admit that I have actually had to give antibiotics to a bird for the first time ever as well. I have 2 adorable 13 week EEs that have been in the house now for about 2 weeks. I have done everything. Electrolytes, probiotics, more Corid, tube feeding. Man have I learned so much! I am not about to lose them darn it! So after all of these things, one of the EEs was still just not rebounding to eat on her own. So frustrating! 2 weeks! So, I gave her Amoxicillin in her tube feeding last night. The full 250 mg caplet darn it. I mean what do I have to lose? She is going to die if I can't figure out her problem and get her eating and drinking again.

This morning, she was alert and eating and drinking on her own!! I am skeptical that dose could possibly be that effective but she ate and drank all day. Her crop is currently full and it will be the first time without tube feeding in a long time! She is not recovered by any means but to see her eat on her own nearly brings me to tears. I now have more Amoxicillin in her water but at the first sign of an empty crop and no eating, she gets another tube fed dose.

I always isolate a sick bird and try everything I can to save her. My poor husband. We both get attached and to be honest, we have lost more than we've saved. Now that we learned how to tube feed, I will be quicker with that and Amoxicillin. Maybe I will save more and maybe I won't but at least I tried and I learn along the way. Most large scale chicken producers would just cull and move on. I look at this business two ways though. Part of it is that these girls are my investment and each loss costs me money. The other part is that they rely on me and if I raise them healthy, they give me the most amazing gifts every day. I don't know how their bodies do it and I am in awe of them. I feel that I owe them a good, safe, healthy and happy life. We could never just cull them if there was a chance they could be saved.

I know it's sappy but I don't care. I love my girls!
 
There are so many variables to deal with, I DON'T see how you've managed Jessica. I wake up thinking about things I need to do with the 40 or so that I have now. I can't imagine what it must be like dealing with the numbers that you do. You have my utmost respect and admiration.
I sometimes don't know how we manage either. Thankfully, with the right conditions chickens mostly manage on their own. As much as it feels sometimes like 1000 toddlers, it really isn't.. Lol!

We visit our girls on pasture 3 times each day. 1. At daybreak to let them out. We had to surround their mobile unit at night for protection due to owls picking them off each night. So glad the game cameras caught that and we could stop that problem. We lost many birds before figuring that out. 2. Late morning to early afternoon to collect eggs and throw fodder. 3. At dark to close up coop and collect final eggs of the day. Our pullets growing up have automatic feeders and waterers. Straw needs o be thrown every day and daily health checks but they are pretty much good to go much of the time.

Do I think this easy? HECK NO! We spend 5-6 hours on this every day. That may not sound like much but remember that we both have other "jobs" on top of it. Hubby has a landscape maintenance business taking care of residential and commercial yards and I am a print broker and own a rather large annual advertising piece serving 250 advertisers and 25,000 consumers that is in renewal right now. If loving these chickens and feeding our community these wonderful eggs was the only thing that we had to do, it would be perfect! Hubby gets to quit his job before me though because he needs to be free for building the units and heaving the sacks of feed into the feeders. Poor little me.
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I wanna just play with chickens all day.

I appreciate your respect and admiration but I really don't feel like it's deserved. I am no different than you or anyone else. We are all just just working our arse off to make a living. We just have different ways of going about it.
 
I just read an interesting article about the eyes of chickens. As it turns out besides the visual acuity we knew about chickens also posses rods and cones associated with the perception of ultraviolet light. They also have another type that is believed to serve the sole purpose of detecting motion.
I'm thinking the chickens ACTUALLY DO KNOW WHEN WE ARE TAKING PICTURES.
 
I just read an interesting article about the eyes of chickens. As it turns out besides the visual acuity we knew about chickens also posses rods and cones associated with the perception of ultraviolet light. They also have another type that is believed to serve the sole purpose of detecting motion.
I'm thinking the chickens ACTUALLY DO KNOW WHEN WE ARE TAKING PICTURES.
I guess that would be why they either run like crazy or pose. Lol!
 
I just read an interesting article about the eyes of chickens. As it turns out besides the visual acuity we knew about chickens also posses rods and cones associated with the perception of ultraviolet light. They also have another type that is believed to serve the sole purpose of detecting motion.
I'm thinking the chickens ACTUALLY DO KNOW WHEN WE ARE TAKING PICTURES.

Oh, that TOTALLY explains so much...



- Ant Farm
 
So you know how I said I was skeptical of that big dose of Amoxicillin making a difference in my pullet's health? I didn't give her a dose yesterday she started going back downhill, not eating and drinking again. So last night we tube fed and gave another dose of the antibiotic. This morning she is perky and eating and drinking. Apparently she has something bacterial and the antibiotic is helping.

Man, being a chicken farmer can be hard work!
 
I jinxed myself. I got in this evening and one of my broiler roosters was down. Just made 6weeks. Was missing one eye and breathing was Very labored. I went ahead and put him down.All the rain has the chicken pen smelling like a pig pen.The geese just compound the problem. So, I found the 7 Chinese a new home. That will just leave me with the 5 embdens.They are wayyyyy quieter and not nearly as obnoxious. Should help with the MUD too.lol
Now, the welp slow broilers,The plan was running them 12 weeks then slaughtering the roosters. Unless they start packing on some serious weigh...I DON'T see that happening. I like not having to restrict the feed. I'm NOT happy with the weights.The way the feathers give them size I seriously underestimated the weight.From now on Broilers will be CX. If I can remember to buy a scale this weekend I will post some weights. I'm guessing at around 3lbs,and I've got the feeling that's a generous guess:(Such is life though. Everything is a learning experience.
 
Thanks for the laugh Fire Ant.lol I needed that.

Crazy Paula is always ready and willing to amuse all of us at any time.
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She also happens to be under the impression that there is a loudest Cream Legbar pullet contest going on. Geez... WAY louder than my crowing cockerel, recruits the other two pullets into the ruckus, and she goes ON and ON and ON and ON...
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- Ant Farm
 

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