Themellowyellows
Crowing
Thank you!You have lovely hens!
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Thank you!You have lovely hens!
@SimpleJennGood guy your DH! Those boxes look very useful for chickens in a variety of ways. Nice!
I was given panacur to get rid of the worms in my flock of 20. It's a white liquid that I give orally for three days. It's what my vet uses. What a challenge. First day I had more on the chickens than in them. Maybe today I will do better.You have the equivalent of Panacur in that bottle you shared on the other thread.
Panacur is a brand name. The active ingredient in Panacur is Fenbendazole.
You have three worm treatments in your bottle. One of them is Albendazole.
Fenbendazole and Albendazole are essentially the same thing. The hint is in the name! They are both powerful against roundworms but not against tapeworms. Both can be used in both people and animals. Both are relatively safe.
In your bottle of wormer you also have Pirantel/Pyrantel (which acts against the same worms as Fenbendazole/Albendazole) and Praziquantel which acts against tapeworm.
Glad it’s getting under control. I think the one in Jasper is something like 10,000 acresThat explains where the smoke we've been getting hit with is coming from. The local fires aren't enough to produce all of it. The air quality map...and it just keeps going...
The close fire here as of the last update I saw had been entirely surrounded by a bare earth fire break. Still under a hundred acres. Last night's wind may have changed that, but updates are available yet today. The last update does say it's 40% contained, and they're working on cooling th smoldering hot spots.
UmmmmI was given panacur to get rid of the worms in my flock of 20. It's a white liquid that I give orally for three days. It's what my vet uses. What a challenge. First day I had more on the chickens than in them. Maybe today I will do better.
Some if the added challenge is the terrain. Rough mountains, pine trees, lots killed by pine beetles, and regulations preventing roads getting into the roughest parts to remove most of the dead wood. Even a lightning strike can and will start fires under those conditions and with all the fuel available, get too big/too strong to do anything about before anyone knows its there.Fires, flood and rising temperatures have made so many beautiful places difficult to live. I'm not sure how many of these fires, especially the giant ones in the US, are spontaneous or due to human stupidity / criminal gestures ? It's terrifying to think the damage a cigarette or a still smoking fire can do.
There's one near the state capital that's 15000+ acres. Looks like it's 95% contained. Doesn't mean it's out even if 100% contained. An ember can still float on the wind and stay alive to start one several miles away.Glad it’s getting under control. I think the one in Jasper is something like 10,000 acres![]()
Let us know where we can find a cheap enough plane that flies and lands itself for those of us without pilot's licenses!You are right. That’s why I have Marie. Everything that I actually need of any importance, is 100 or more miles away. I find flying easier than driving such distances.