TheFugitivePen
Songster
New chicken keeper here
I was checking our six-month-old pullets for mites last night and may have found evidence of mite eggs (either that or it's just dirty butts from poop, dirt, and First Saturday Lime). However, I did not see any irritation on their skin, dust on feather stalks, or near their vents. But I may have seen one or two mites in a nest box.
Should we treat mites as a zero-tolerance policy? Or will there always be some regardless of preventative measures?
Or do you only treat when you believe you're heading toward infestation? At what point do you seriously treat the coop, run, and hens for mites as opposed to just treating them preventatively?
I just want to keep my birds as happy and healthy as possible, and I believe an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure .... but I also don't want to overdue it and spray their coop the moment I find a mite if there will just always be a few stray mites in the coop regardless.
Thank you so much!

I was checking our six-month-old pullets for mites last night and may have found evidence of mite eggs (either that or it's just dirty butts from poop, dirt, and First Saturday Lime). However, I did not see any irritation on their skin, dust on feather stalks, or near their vents. But I may have seen one or two mites in a nest box.
Should we treat mites as a zero-tolerance policy? Or will there always be some regardless of preventative measures?
Or do you only treat when you believe you're heading toward infestation? At what point do you seriously treat the coop, run, and hens for mites as opposed to just treating them preventatively?
I just want to keep my birds as happy and healthy as possible, and I believe an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure .... but I also don't want to overdue it and spray their coop the moment I find a mite if there will just always be a few stray mites in the coop regardless.
Thank you so much!