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So, when I get my new chickies this Spring (first timer here), is it best to introduce them to the outdoors within the first week of life instead of buying the medicated feed?
That is what I do, but it's your decision. I get a shallow pan, like a kitty litter pan, and put dirt from my garden/yard in the pan and give them a place to dig and dust bathe in their inside pen, whether they're with a broody or just being brooded with a heat lamp. It begins their exposure to the oocysts in the soil right away. Seems I see much less cocci than I used to by doing it this way. And unless the co-op is simply out of non-medicated feed and I must have it right then, I never use medicated anymore. It just is not effective in preventing coccidiosis, IMHO.
Whichever you do, always watch for signs of coccidiosis. They can contract it on medicated feed or non-medicated.
Thanks all for your great help and information. So I am gong to be ordering my chicks and have them delivered in the early spring. I will use non-medicated feed, and introduce them to my soil within the first week that I have them. I will order up my Corid and try to have everything in my power to help these chickies along. Thanks to all.
@speckledhen I can't believe this thread has been out here since May, and I'm just now noticing it. Great information here. It's got me wondering... Sometimes you do things just because that's the way you were taught, without understanding why you do it. A foot stomper for my mentor was brood 3 weeks and move them to a portable shelter on day 22 and move them to fresh grass every day. I've never had a case of cocci, even though my friends and neighbors all have. It's got me thinking, now about my routine.