Milk flush for coccidiosis

What should I do if my hens do not eat garlic ?

thanks

Well, most animals are naturally suspicious about new food items. Getting them to taste it in the first place is often the biggest hurdle and then they may take a day or so to think about it before they eat it willingly.

In that case mixing garlic with something they like, i.e. yoghurt, can help. Some scientific studies suggest chickens have an instant feedback loop that confirms to them whether what they're tasting is good or bad. Actually all animals and humans have that, but there are margins of error, some large, made pretty obvious by animals eating poisonous things and dying.

After the Fukushima incident my chooks swore off garlic from China, which is what I'd been using mostly. I never told them about Fukishima, they never watch the news, lol --- I don't know why they refused to eat it, but from loving it they went to hating it in a few short weeks and completely refuse to touch it now. So now I use garlic from Spain, Australia, and other countries.

I have some concerns about modern strains of garlic because many modern plants are not nutritionally comparable to the heirloom varieties or the primitive ones, which are what old school natural health care is based on. Comfrey for example is very medicinal --- discounting the dozens of modern cultivars, some of which are useless, and some of which are harmful. Corn for another example used to be a main staple food so nutritious it was capable of keeping animals and humans alive single-handedly for very long periods, but modern corn is just not capable of doing the same. I intend to grow all my own stuff as able because too many plants are near-useless now, they've been bred up to be bloated, water-holding, tasteless versions of their ancestors which travel better, look better on shelves for longer, cope better with massive doses of pesticides etc, and due to all that, they aren't better for us in any way, unfortunately they're worse by far and nutrient-impoverished.

If they won't eat garlic, you could try Rue, some old farmers used to plant it so the birds could eat it free choice and it is supposedly superior to garlic for poultry use. Someone on this forum told me that like some powdery blueish plants it can cause eczema in sensitive people, so best to be aware of that possibility.

Best wishes.
 
I apologize if someone asked this question as I didn't read all of the responses. Getting late and needing to head to bed. If the antibiotic is a Sulfa drug as the OP stated has anyone that has a sensitivity to Sulfa drugs had any issues from eating the eggs from treated hens? I have a sensitivity to Sulfa drugs and would be interesting to know.
 
I apologize if someone asked this question as I didn't read all of the responses. Getting late and needing to head to bed. If the antibiotic is a Sulfa drug as the OP stated has anyone that has a sensitivity to Sulfa drugs had any issues from eating the eggs from treated hens? I have a sensitivity to Sulfa drugs and would be interesting to know.

Yes, it's pretty likely, if you eat the eggs laid within the elimination period for that drug. I personally have some sensitivity to the artificial or very processed sulfur family, it's acquired, but I'm fine with raw garlic and eggs which are both high in natural sulfur.

Not ok with storebought eggs though, and neither is anyone else I know who is sulfur-sensitive, which I would guess is down to traces of sulfur drugs in the eggs.

My sensitivity is mild but I know some people who react severely to storebought eggs, just the same way they react to the sulfur preservatives used in other foods, so it's very likely it's the same thing. It's a unique reaction, hard to mistake for anything else.

They won't get cocci if you feed them raw garlic, but it is an ongoing thing you'd need to do. If you let them get sick and treat them with raw garlic then you'd still most likely save most or even all of them but with diseases they basically can't avoid getting exposed to, letting them get sick before you treat them isn't the best animal husbandry, so I don't recommend that, obviously.

Best wishes with finding what works best for you.
 
One of my chicks was acting weird, falling over and walking on its feet, loose poops but no blood and lethargic. We did the milk flush for 5 days...she is like a different chick! This was so helpful!:)
 
Can I make a milk flush with evaporated milk, oatmeal, flaxseed meal, and corn bread mix?
(I don't have powdered milk, bran, and cornmeal lol)
 
What kind of bran is this and where can i get it from. Sorry i dont mean to sound dumb or anything but there are multiple types of bran and i havent seen (not that i have looked for just bran unless it was muffin mix LOL) just a bag of bran. Thanks for the info in advance, Nikki
 
Not sure if our chickens had coccidiosis, but the vet said that we should treat them periodically for it whether they officially have it or not. So we tried the milk flush as an alternative to medicated feed. Their laying increased during that period, but other than that they seem the same to me (which was healthy). I will probably use it every 6 months just as a precautionary measure.




In my area there is no chicken vets ... cat/dog vets consider chickens as livestock and livestock vets won't do birds ... do this is all we have .. sometimes having a vet isn't a option.. I wish I had one!
 

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