rewildingheart
Hatching
- Jul 10, 2021
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But if lice live on chickens and soil all summer long than is it pointless to separate the baby chicks from mama at all?It sounds like you are a very good steward of your flock.
So I want you to know that I do a LOT of research to find the least toxic solutions to the problems of mites, lice, and any other parasites I might find on my chickens.
Boric acid is so non-toxic that I don't bother wearing gloves when I bathe my babies.
Eprinex is the only parasite treatment I found that has NO requirement to withhold milk or wait before slaughtering treated cattle. So I don't worry about my hens' eggs, either, (although when I have enough eggs to sell, I probably won't sell them for eating within the week after treatment.)
I'm new to chickens, so this month I'll be running a test to see if the fertility of my eggs is significantly reduced after treatment with Eprinex. I'll report back next month.
Permethrin is relatively nontoxic once it has dried -- that is, as long as you aren't an insect! As long as your hens aren't breathing in large quantities of the spray, they will be fine.
What I'm saying is, there is no compelling reason NOT to treat all your birds and all their living areas with Eprinex and Permethrin.
Lice don't spend any part of their life cycle off the birds. They can travel from one bird to another, but they lay their eggs on feather shafts, and they need to stay warm to be able to move around. So they live on the birds and in bedding, like nest boxes, where they can stay warm and cozy.
Chicks are too small to treat with Eprinex. That's why they have to be bathed in boric acid and kept away from birds and areas that may still have some lice and louse eggs.
But if you treat ALL your birds and coops/runs, then in just a few weeks your chicks and mama hen will be able to rejoin your flock, and everyone can enjoy a louse free life.
It is recommended to delouse your flocks and coops at the end of every summer, because the birds will spend so much time in their coops in winter.
Also, lice can live on the soil all summer long because it's warm. In Summer, free-ranging flocks that forage for bugs and things in the warm soil pick up new lice as fast as you can treat them. So Fall is the best opportunity to get rid of all of them at once just before the cold weather sets in.