Banana01
Songster
Not likely, i dont know what happens to excess calcium, but too much is unecessary. I have done powdered supplelments several days in a row for hens before and one week they were normal.Can they get a calcium toxicity?
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Not likely, i dont know what happens to excess calcium, but too much is unecessary. I have done powdered supplelments several days in a row for hens before and one week they were normal.Can they get a calcium toxicity?
Ok thanks for that. I was a little conflicted. She’s not laying but with a obvious problem I feel like it’s the right thing to do. I’ll give it for 2 weeks and see if there’s improvementAs long as hens are laying eggs, they can't suffer from too much calcium. However, non-layers, roosters, and pullets not laying yet can get too much calcium, but it would take months of it to be hard on the kidneys.
Give the calcium and be confident no harm will be done over a few weeks of treatment.
Wow I had no idea....Feed does degrade over time. Some stores will keep old feed on the floor until someone buys it. You might be able to get away with this for older birds, but chicks and youngsters still growing need every single nutrient in the feed because they are developing so very very quickly. When buying feed for growing birds, you absolutely must check the mill date.
A couple months ago, I was in Tractor Supply getting Purina Flock Raiser. I tried to check the mill date on the sew tape but the company had changed the code to something I couldn't begin to figure out. I went and asked an employee to come help me figure it out. They had no clue and stood there staring at me. I said, "Get your phone out and call the company and ask. He did. We both learned something.