I have disabled children and we hatched some rare breed chickens last year as a hobby and it's been lovely up until now.
All has been fine up until now, the coop has been regularly cleaned and they have a massive aviary to themselves and are let out for an hour or two a day to keep the lawn down! The aviary floor is natural ground with bark chippings and shavings.
It has been a nightmare trying to keep everything dry though as the weather has been so awful here for months on end.
We also hatched some more this year and those seem fine right now.
We have Lavender aracanas, Appenzeller Spitzhauben, Favorelles, Frizzle pekins, two scatty but gorgeous White Leghorns and a Wyandotte.
But of the year old ones, I have 30 of them, some have developed respiratory problems.
I introduced two gold appenzeller pullets to the flock about 4 months ago that I purchased from a breeder. I quaranteened the two pullets for six weeks and as soon as I put them into the flock I noticed scaley leg mites, so out they came from the flock and were treated with Ivermictin from the vet.
The two of them are very noisy, squawking like crazy much worse that the others I have. I wormed them as soon as I got them with flubenvet and the scaley leg mites have now gone, could this be the root of the respiritory infection in my flock?
I regularly worm the birds with flubenvet twice a year and they have apple cider vinegar in their water. They are fed the appropriate heygates food for their age with fresh veg and occasionally fruit.
I put extra poultry grit into the aviary, just grit this time, not oyster shells, could I have hurt them by giving them grit that is too rough for them, causing damage resulting in infection?
I have taken it all out now and they are free roaming all over the garden to get the natural grit from our flower boarders.
I have done some research and the two most effective drugs for respiritory infections in chickens are Erythromycin and Doxycyline which is a drug to take care with in humans (used as an antimalarial) and can cause sensitivity to light in humans.
I have some ornimyco which is doxycyline 20mg each tablet for pigeons in a soluble form, I am hoping this will do the trick as my vet doesn't seem to know much about chickens as he practises mainly in small domestic animals like cats and dogs.
I am going to treat them all as this can be used as a preventative measure too, but I have seperated the sick rattly chest ones but want to get the antibiotics inside them asap.
Before I call the vet, does anyone know the correct dosage to mix in a litre of water for them? I read that it is 5mg to 1 litre of water on one poultry website, but that seems very strong if one pigeon takes 20mg a day for 5 days.
I would call the vet first but I know he will just do the same as me and look it up on the internet because he's not a chicken expert, so thought I'd ask here first before asking him.
All has been fine up until now, the coop has been regularly cleaned and they have a massive aviary to themselves and are let out for an hour or two a day to keep the lawn down! The aviary floor is natural ground with bark chippings and shavings.
It has been a nightmare trying to keep everything dry though as the weather has been so awful here for months on end.
We also hatched some more this year and those seem fine right now.
We have Lavender aracanas, Appenzeller Spitzhauben, Favorelles, Frizzle pekins, two scatty but gorgeous White Leghorns and a Wyandotte.
But of the year old ones, I have 30 of them, some have developed respiratory problems.
I introduced two gold appenzeller pullets to the flock about 4 months ago that I purchased from a breeder. I quaranteened the two pullets for six weeks and as soon as I put them into the flock I noticed scaley leg mites, so out they came from the flock and were treated with Ivermictin from the vet.
The two of them are very noisy, squawking like crazy much worse that the others I have. I wormed them as soon as I got them with flubenvet and the scaley leg mites have now gone, could this be the root of the respiritory infection in my flock?
I regularly worm the birds with flubenvet twice a year and they have apple cider vinegar in their water. They are fed the appropriate heygates food for their age with fresh veg and occasionally fruit.
I put extra poultry grit into the aviary, just grit this time, not oyster shells, could I have hurt them by giving them grit that is too rough for them, causing damage resulting in infection?
I have taken it all out now and they are free roaming all over the garden to get the natural grit from our flower boarders.
I have done some research and the two most effective drugs for respiritory infections in chickens are Erythromycin and Doxycyline which is a drug to take care with in humans (used as an antimalarial) and can cause sensitivity to light in humans.
I have some ornimyco which is doxycyline 20mg each tablet for pigeons in a soluble form, I am hoping this will do the trick as my vet doesn't seem to know much about chickens as he practises mainly in small domestic animals like cats and dogs.
I am going to treat them all as this can be used as a preventative measure too, but I have seperated the sick rattly chest ones but want to get the antibiotics inside them asap.
Before I call the vet, does anyone know the correct dosage to mix in a litre of water for them? I read that it is 5mg to 1 litre of water on one poultry website, but that seems very strong if one pigeon takes 20mg a day for 5 days.
I would call the vet first but I know he will just do the same as me and look it up on the internet because he's not a chicken expert, so thought I'd ask here first before asking him.
Last edited: