I have to give one of my plymouths a clacium tablet for soft eggs. My ideas is to put it in scrambled eggs for her to eat because she wont it just the pill. And she wont eat it crushed. How much tablet should I give her? The tablets are big.
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If you can dissolve it into a runny paste, apply it to her beak like you would a liquid medicine. Use an eyedropper or small spoon to lay the liquid along the side of her beak. Her swallow reflex should kick in and she'll take it in, right away. That's how we give electrolytes and any other liquids. Works like a charm!This is what I have
This is what I use as I have one that tends to lay soft eggs despite oyster shells being available. She is the only one that doesn't eat them..for whatever reason. Has seemed to "help"You might also try a layer food that contains oyster shell. Purina Layena is the only one I know of, but there may be others. More expensive than some, probably, but worth it if it helps!
If it works? I just can't imagine them stuffed in sunflower seeds. LolI stuffed them in sunflower seeds and she seemed to eat them. Some she spit out lol
There treat bag is mixed with garden stuff as well as sunflower seeds. I cracked them open and stuffed a tiny amount in and "closed" it up and she ate it so hopefully it worksIf it works? I just can't imagine them stuffed in sunflower seeds. Lol
Is there a specific reason for giving her calcium tablets instead of a different type of calcium supplement? There are lots of options for adding calcium. Commercially sold oyster shell is an easy one., I keep it it a rabbit feeder so mine can have as much as they want whenever they want it. They're very good at regulating themselves when it's readily available. A quick fix is to scramble some eggs, shell and all, and feed them back to her. If you really need to use the tablets, you can do the same thing - crush it into scrambled eggs.I have to give one of my plymouths a clacium tablet for soft eggs. My ideas is to put it in scrambled eggs for her to eat because she wont it just the pill. And she wont eat it crushed. How much tablet should I give her? The tablets are big.
I have a roister who has ruined all of the hens feathers and waiting to molt so they can get jew ones in. Could that be a stresser? I've been thinking to get them saddles. When she lays the soft egg it looks very uncomfortable as she is doing it standing up on the roost. At first I saw liquid coming out of her butt and than I realized she was gonna lay the egg so I caught it in a scoop thing so there wouldnt be a mess.An occasional soft egg or even several a week for a couple of weeks is not the end of the world. Egg laying is a complex process, and sometimes it goofs up. I know that many people fret over this, but truthfully, even if you do nothing, more than likely it will go away. A lot of people treat with additives and then think they cured it, but there is a strong possibility it will go away on it's own.
Calcium on the side if perfectly reasonable. If they need it, they will crave it is the theory. I have it out, and it is basically untouched, and eventually wears away in the rain. Once in a while I will get a soft egg, but most of the time I have good eggs.
I would not give a bird, or stress a bird out by trying to give a pill.
Mrs K