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Is it wrong ????

I think the way you are feeding them is fine but just a quick note - the medicated feed does contain pesticides (C14H19N4+ · Cl−, e.g., amprolium hydrochloride).

If you were looking to feed an all natural feed without chemicals, I would not feed medicated feed. Not saying what you are doing is wrong whatsoever in the slightest, just sharing feedback regarding the chemical. I'm a advocate for amprolium when used to treat coccidiosis, but I choose to not give it when it isn't necessary (sort of like giving antibiotics when not necessary - my school of thought is there has to be a level of resistance that is established when certain things are a constant). The chemical is also known to have side-effects associated with weight gain in poultry - which can be a good thing depending on how you look at it.

For treats, you can raise your own mealworms inexpensively or maggots if you have a compost pile - that way you know what is going into the treats.
Aprolium is NOT a pesticide. Its a Thiamine Antagonist.

Yes, its a chemical. As is everything else. But it is NOT a pesticide.

and the side effect "weight gain" is the result of lesser competition for nutrition from the coccidia present in their gutt.
 
Aprolium is NOT a pesticide. Its a Thiamine Antagonist.

Yes, its a chemical. As is everything else. But it is NOT a pesticide.

and the side effect "weight gain" is the result of lesser competition for nutrition from the coccidia present in their gutt.
Point taken as it's a preventative and not a killer of coccidia. So if OP is looking to reduce usage of chemicals -or- pesticides in his flock, he can consider this information. :)

I also have been following the whitepapers/research studies concerning usage in livestock and it is interesting to see the effects that it -can- (not will, for clarity's sake) cause in livestock.
 

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