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New to raising chickens have questions

Sonoma Gal

In the Brooder
May 18, 2025
12
40
34
Hi to all,

New to group and chicken raising. Looks like a great forum for resource.

I bought six chickens at day two of age. They are now 12 weeks they have been transferred from brooder to coop and confined run ( small backyard ). They have been on medicated food since bringing them home. I see caramel colored loose stool here and there in the run. Does the flock need a full treatment of Corid? If so what is recommended/easiest for treatment, liquid or powder form? I have sat in the run and fed them by hand keeping a watchful eye on who might be the loose stool gal, after a long while in run I wasn't able to tease this out. Also, I have been getting mixed information online about when to stop medicated crumble. Can someone knowledgeable explain precisely the feeding routine now that they are 12 weeks please? I'd prefer them to be off the medicated crumble but realize the flock may need Corid?

Since they are confined I have been feeding them my fresh grown sprouted wheat as a source of " greens ".

Thanks ( in advance ) for guiding me
 

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Looks like cecal poop which is perfectly normal. No need to medicate unless you are certain of disease and a sick bird would be presenting more than just odd droppings.

As for medicated feed, I’m on the fence with it myself. I start chicks on it for a few weeks or until the bag runs out, then I use regular chick feed. The medicated feed is only really useful with particularly fragile chicks and if you can’t keep the brooder clean enough. A dry, clean brooder will prevent coccidiosis is most cases.
 
Looks like cecal poop which is perfectly normal. No need to medicate unless you are certain of disease and a sick bird would be presenting more than just odd droppings.

As for medicated feed, I’m on the fence with it myself. I start chicks on it for a few weeks or until the bag runs out, then I use regular chick feed. The medicated feed is only really useful with particularly fragile chicks and if you can’t keep the brooder clean enough. A dry, clean brooder will prevent coccidiosis is most cases.
I haven't heard about cecal poops. Thank you for all this informative insight.
 

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