knoturavggrl
Chicken Math Victim
Piglet posed just perfectly, she seems to know how pretty she isMonday Mugshots from Babs and Piglet.
Have a lovely Monday everyone.
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Piglet posed just perfectly, she seems to know how pretty she isMonday Mugshots from Babs and Piglet.
Have a lovely Monday everyone.
View attachment 3547877View attachment 3547878
My chooks don’t poop, and my farts don’t stink! ( DB Kellogg )I know, right? I think he trains his ladies, or keeps a broom by the doorway…![]()
Thanks, I'll do that as soon as possible.UNH Extension service advise on Bumblefoot
Youtube video of non surgical bumblefoot treatment
Please do start treating right away! The longer it goes untreated, the worse it gets and the less likely you are to cure it.
The UNM bulletin mentions treating with anti-biotics, but I am not sure about that. I know that there are resistant Staph bacteria - maybe @BY Bob would know IF you should, and with what if it is a 'yes'
Note that there were a couple of errors in there (typos) I thought I fixed them, but I see they are showing in your reply. The 2 pieces that form the pop door top/bottom are 11.5" (not 1.5!!!), and there is a ' instead of a" mark somewhere.Bookmarked, thanks, BG!
Very interesting ! Thank you for the discussion.Speaking of that, I've been meaning to ask opinions/input. I'm doing my annual 'check the chicken first aid kit' (for full stocking & to replace anything that may have expired)
Below is what it contains - any suggestions? @BY Bob @RoyalChick @Ponypoor (and anyone else who has some knowledge/experience in this area! (list is in no particular order, btw)
Rubbing alcohol (used to sterilize things - before and after)
Hydrogen Peroxide
Betadine
Alcohol Wipes (in case I need to sterilize something on the fly)
Blue Kote
Drawing Salve
Coconut oil
Epsom salt
Essential oils (therapeutic grade): (these have other general health benefits - listed are just for 'first-aid purposes)
Lavender (antiseptic antinociceptive, anti-inflammatory)
Rosemary (anti-inflammatory)
Peppermint (anti-fungal, anti-viral)
Clove (anti-microbial, numbing agent (for pain)
Oregano (anti-bacterial, possible anti-inflammatory)
Note: these can't be used 'straight', I use coconut oil as a carrier oil.
Sm container of ant-acid tablets ( for quick calcium)
B-vit. Complex
Scissors, Tweezers, Toe Nail Clippers, Metal nail file
Q-tips
gauze pads (sterile - assorted sizes) & rolled gauze
Single use super glue packages
wound sealer (basically, a powder used for severely bleeding wounds - I bought a set for my first aid kit and put 1 in the chicken's )
sm. container of corn starch
triple anti-biotic ointment
vet wrap (lots!, ha, ha)
water-proof tape
scalpel & sterile blades
tongue depressors & popsicle sticks
Anti-bacterial hand wipes
disposable gloves
a few bandaids (such as knuckle ones) and some steri-strips
'Suture' kit (100% cotton thread, curved needle & straight needle)
Magnifying glass (my eyes are getting bad)
Low dose Aspirin, liquid children's ibuprofen
pedialyte, nutri-drench. + my own mix of powdered electrolytes (that I usually add honey to when I mix up)
Chicken wash cloth
[All of the above are in a small plastic tool box I can take with me]
Not in the kit, but also available:
Human amoxicillin
Chicken towels
A 5-pack of dog pee pads (great to use when doing something messy - clean up easier!)
Dish pan ( to soak feet, etc. JUST FOR CHICKEN USE)
Plastic dog crate for isolation if needed
Permethrin (just have what was left (lots!) from last year's mite offense)
I think that is everything I have (though I might have missed something - I'm doing it from memory)
Is there anything glaring I am missing? something you find helpful I should consider?
I know @BY Bob recommends having baytril on hand - ?do I need this since I have amoxicillin (i.e. are there times I should use one instead of the other?)
Note: I use pumpkin seeds for worming!
Thank you for any helpful input!
Edited to add: Yes, I have a hair dryer available, also - Thanks @featherhead007 !
I have two possibly "sensitive" questions. I'm not asking for opinions on whether it's a good thing or not as it would lead us into an endless debateYes, you need Baytril. There are many bacteria that amoxicillin does not treat.
You also need an anaerobic antibiotic like tylosin. I have a combination antibiotic, amoxy-tyl for my anaerobic coverage.
I don't see a real dewormer. I would have another dewormer beyond pumpkin seeds.
Syringes
Feeding tube
Liquid Calcium
Corid for coccidia
Ophthalmic antibiotic
Probiotics
Chlorhexidine spray and gel
I opened my kit to check. I also have Endo blend (CBD) for chronic pain.
Bucket trap should work well for mice. Rats learn from ones demise and rarely do you get another. With all of my attempts, I never got more than a total of 3 with any one kind of trap! Mice are not 'communal' in the way rats are, and don't pass knowledge from one to another the same - so traps continue to work repeatedly for them (as long as you remove the dead fairly quickly.)Yes which is why I haven’t used it any further than a couple years ago when they were just really running amok. Didn’t want to risk any of my chickens or other animals.
I am not so worried about them getting outside and dying as they tend to stay around their tunnels and homes. But my chickens are at risk.
They are so bad when I haul a bale of hay from the loft, mice run out from under the bales darn creatures.
I still want to do a bucket trap when I get a chance.
I was thinking the exact same thing - the cost of a protracted war against rats may not be as economical as paying for dry ice shipping.Baking soda only kills them if they ingest enough - when it mixed with their stomach acid, 'bubbles up/expands with gas, and presses against their lungs (suffocating them). However, they won't easily eat baking soda on their own - due to the basic nature of it, it will give them a bit of a burn in their mouth if it is straight,
take a container (peanut butter jar cover is great for this)that has been cleaned (i.e. so it doesn't have human scent on it) and with gloves on place it just outside the chicken run* with food for them (peanut butter, tuna fish, scratch feed, whatever), And LEAVE it for a few days (check daily to see if they start eating it) Once they don't 'fear' it and start eating from it, start mixing baking soda with whatever you have been putting out. Again, USE GLOVES! Rats have a VERY GOOD sense of smell....and they are also very wary of new things - hence the wait period.
Once you have the rat population under control, sprinkling heavily baking soda around the coop & run will help deter them (they do clean their paws, so will lick some from their paws when cleaning them, and will learn to avoid that area IF THEY AREN"T ALREADY LIVING THERE!. Rats are smart, and learn...and because they live in colonies (unlike mice) also learn from/teach each other.
SO: I would also consider using a variety of different traps for Rats. (such as a couple of different types of snap traps.) Also set out with 'food' for them OUTSIDE the chicken run, and NOT SET for a couple of days. Then, the same time you start mixing Baking soda with the other food, also start setting them with the bait. Multi-pronged approach simultaneously.
You could also set out glue traps at the same time as actually setting the other traps live - surrounding their holes so they 'have to' step on them. Again, these only work once or twice, also. The rats soon leaner to scratch dirt on them and 'neutralize' them. Most rat glue traps come in pairs that are glue side together. Since they are so warry, you might want to put them out during the 'desensitization phase - as they are/not separated, so they get accustomed to the smell of the glue traps, but they are, at that point, harmless.
Any one of these things will not work alone...and they ALL need to be done so the rats get accustomed to them (3-5 days) - before deploying them in 'harmful' mode!
Trust me - I did not do this, and am suffering the consequences!
I would be so hesitant to use poison - because if your chickens (or your dog or any dog or cat) then eats the dead rat, it will kill them! (Just ask Alex! Poor @featherhead007 has lost a couple of chooks to neighbor throwing poisoned mice into his yard!
Best of luck!
If these don't work, it might be less expensive in the long run to pay shipping for dry ice. If you don't get them ALL, they can fully repopulate in only 8 weeks!
*Note, you might want to put it inside some kind of wire protection - something they can fit through, but that something larger like a raccoon, can't, so you don't start feeding other things!)