X2 100% no doubtsLooks like a rooster to me.
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X2 100% no doubtsLooks like a rooster to me.
True... so many medications come in many concentrations, and people seem to have trouble understanding this. Liquid enrofloxacin (Baytril) is a good example, it sold as 2.27%, 2.5%, 5% and 10%.You need to get the concentration information from the container you are using. The medicine can be in different concentrations for different uses, the only concentration that matters is on the package you are using.
That is the 5.5% stuff.Antibiotic question:
I have a package that is 181.5g or 6.4oz, says the package contains 10 grams of oxytetracycline HCI. ON the back the dosage is as follows:
Infectious Synovitis: 200-400mg/gal
Chronic Respiratory Disease: 400-800mg/gal
Fowl cholera: 400-800mg/gal
Beside the "Dosage" info it says,
5-10 Packets/2 gallons Stock solution
10-20 ""
10-20 ""
Respectively to the above "Dosage" info.
So, do I really dump 5 181.5g packets into 2 gallons???
It seems a lot! The lady at the feed store said she puts "a pinch per quart" *sighs*
For the record, math IS my weakest suit.
HELP!
PS: Jeansrie, that is one adorable chick!
*edited to correct typo
That is the 5.5% stuff.
Have not verified this yet, but I think the dose will be very close to:
800 mg = 1 tablespoon per gallon
400 mg = 1.5 teaspoons per gallon
200 mg = 3/4 teaspoons per gallon
-Kathy
No, she didn't hatch any of them. She was broody when the chicks hatched in the incubator. She was sitting on a smooth rock in that corner of the hen house. I made her the pen and when she continued to sit on the rock, I slipped half of the 4 day old chicks in under her at night and gave her the rest early the next morning. Don Gibson got me started on the Bantam Delaware. They are really a great breed.Did she hatch all 24? Jack has a flock of LF Delawares now. They sure are pretty birds, and great layers. Bantams must be absolutely adorable.A few pictures.. A Delaware Bantam hen with month old chicks. [COLOR=B42000] Ying and Yang with some of their chicks...they would love to be on the floor, but there are juveniles that need to go out as soon as pens dry out first. They successfully brooded together in their pen and are vigilant mothers. [COLOR=B42000] [/COLOR=B42000] Miranda's temporary pen...on the dirt floor in the hen house and then her with her 24 chicks. She was a rooster favorite thus the bare back, but her chicks don't seem to mind it and she will recover her plumage when she molts. [/COLOR=B42000]
Pm me your address and I can sen you some seed.