Silkie thread!

Congrats!! So cute. I do use the electrolytes, but I am one that does not go with the full dose. I have found that it does more harm than good on the weaker ones. Not sure why. When I have a weak one, I give it even less than half the suggested dose. And I give the weak ones, just a tiny drop at a time. A drop an hr. for a half a day...or night, what ever it is when they hatch. :) For those that hatch on their own and are running around just fine, I put half the dose in the water container. Just sayin. :)


I thought a packet of it went into a whole gallon of water - is that the size water container you are using?

To whoever asked the question originally, I can honestly say I felt it was a waste of money. I've raised numerous batches of chicks on nothing but plain, old water, but recently acquired 21 newly hatched chicks from a local person who had hatched too many and didn't know what to do with them all. I noticed one was having difficulty breathing the day I brought them home and sure enough, it didn't make it. But from there, one by one they dropped. I went from having literally NEVER lost a chick, out of hundreds brooded, to losing one every couple of days. Nothing was different - temps were good, food the same as I always use, bedding/water the same, no drafts. Trust me, I went over every consideration. So I got some Sav-a-chick, hoping it would give them a boost. It didn't change a thing. (After a week of Sav-a-Chick, I tried Duramycin-10 - it didn't help either.) Long story short, I lost 13 of the original 21 chicks.
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its over and the 8 that remain are strong and healthy. They are now 3 1/2 weeks old and having some outside time each day in our high temps and so far, so good. I will admit I tried the Sav-a-Chick as a desperation move, but base my opinion on it on the results: it didn't slow down the rate of loss one iota. I have to conclude that these chicks were either a weak batch or brought some respiratory ailment in with them. I would have expected an infection virus to hit them at the same time instead of one by one over a period of three weeks but there you have it.

I'm a little wary about all these supplements and stuff. I trust that mother nature will weed out the weak ones and leave the strong ones. In general, why keep the weak ones to breed for more weak ones, right? That's how I see it. Of course I hate to see any animal suffer or die, I love all animals. I work on a non-profit rescue farm, we get a lot of animals that at times need very urgent care.
Anyway. I hatched my first 6 chicks last year, didn't know anything about hatching or any of these supplements and such. They all survived and are doing great today. These chicks that are hatching now, are their babies.
I will probably go get a thing of Sav-a-Chick anyway and put maybe half (or less) of the packet in the one gallon waterer we have plus have plain water for them to choose from. Can't hurt, right?
 
I thought a packet of it went into a whole gallon of water - is that the size water container you are using?

To whoever asked the question originally, I can honestly say I felt it was a waste of money. I've raised numerous batches of chicks on nothing but plain, old water, but recently acquired 21 newly hatched chicks from a local person who had hatched too many and didn't know what to do with them all. I noticed one was having difficulty breathing the day I brought them home and sure enough, it didn't make it. But from there, one by one they dropped. I went from having literally NEVER lost a chick, out of hundreds brooded, to losing one every couple of days. Nothing was different - temps were good, food the same as I always use, bedding/water the same, no drafts. Trust me, I went over every consideration. So I got some Sav-a-chick, hoping it would give them a boost. It didn't change a thing. (After a week of Sav-a-Chick, I tried Duramycin-10 - it didn't help either.) Long story short, I lost 13 of the original 21 chicks.
fl.gif
its over and the 8 that remain are strong and healthy. They are now 3 1/2 weeks old and having some outside time each day in our high temps and so far, so good. I will admit I tried the Sav-a-Chick as a desperation move, but base my opinion on it on the results: it didn't slow down the rate of loss one iota. I have to conclude that these chicks were either a weak batch or brought some respiratory ailment in with them. I would have expected an infection virus to hit them at the same time instead of one by one over a period of three weeks but there you have it.

Losses like that is not 'normal' at all...I personally would never feel comfortable mixing a sick batch like that in or near my main flock of birds...Coryza and some other diseases will spread slowly from 1 bird to another 1 or 2, so on and so forth...One has to remember that most respitory diseases never truly go away, and survivors and non-symptomatic birds can be carriers to spread to healthy birds.

Save A Chick is just vitamins/electrolytes. same thing as sugar water or gatorade mixed in water. just a bit of a boost, its not an antibiotic or anything that will cure an ailment.
 
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I thought a packet of it went into a whole gallon of water - is that the size water container you are using?

To whoever asked the question originally, I can honestly say I felt it was a waste of money. I've raised numerous batches of chicks on nothing but plain, old water, but recently acquired 21 newly hatched chicks from a local person who had hatched too many and didn't know what to do with them all. I noticed one was having difficulty breathing the day I brought them home and sure enough, it didn't make it. But from there, one by one they dropped. I went from having literally NEVER lost a chick, out of hundreds brooded, to losing one every couple of days. Nothing was different - temps were good, food the same as I always use, bedding/water the same, no drafts. Trust me, I went over every consideration. So I got some Sav-a-chick, hoping it would give them a boost. It didn't change a thing. (After a week of Sav-a-Chick, I tried Duramycin-10 - it didn't help either.) Long story short, I lost 13 of the original 21 chicks.
fl.gif
its over and the 8 that remain are strong and healthy. They are now 3 1/2 weeks old and having some outside time each day in our high temps and so far, so good. I will admit I tried the Sav-a-Chick as a desperation move, but base my opinion on it on the results: it didn't slow down the rate of loss one iota. I have to conclude that these chicks were either a weak batch or brought some respiratory ailment in with them. I would have expected an infection virus to hit them at the same time instead of one by one over a period of three weeks but there you have it.


No, I only put half of what they call for in that gallon, then I put it in their little water er. It's barely colored yellow..I only use it for one day. I hear you on the waste of money. I have to think it did help a lot of my weak ones though, unless it was just coincidence. Who knows for sure? Some like using sugar water. Never tried that.
I don't use Duramycin any longer. I love the Denagard. Haven't had to use full strength in a year and a half..since my one and only break out of upper respiratory. That stuff works like a miracle, and I only use it once a year now, with low dosage, for prevention. Can eat eggs after, no waiting period. I'm allergic to Pen. so, this was a good thing I came across from here on BYC. I've never used it on chicks. But I'm wondering if I should have after getting chicks from McMurray, and they started dropping like flies! Don't like getting live chicks. Too sad. So, hatching I do!
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Not to say, I will never order chicks again. Maybe when I get too old and tired of hatching..
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Wait. I'm already old. Tired too. Still hatching!
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I have a question for all you pros. I just got my first silkies about a month ago. My question is, can you bath or wash silkies? I don't know where i heard you can but i was woundering if it's true? I have splash, white and black. They seem to be getting realy dirty and crusty. If someone could let me know what to do about that it would be great. They are so fluffy and they get kind of grubby, lol, just like little kids. Thanks to who ever started this thread.
 
this is my 3m/o silkie it has a comb and wattles and my other chicks do not... so, which sex is this one because it seems to have a round fuzzy top like a hen but a raised comb like a roo. the other chicks have a flat spot where the comb should be. also, what do you look for to know what is show quality and what is not? thank you for any advice you can give me in advance! reply or pm me please
 
It is hard to tell from photos of adult silkies, since their combs are generally covered by their wild hair, but I am thinking my little two month old blue is a roo - he has, what seems to me, a HUGE comb on his little face, and he is super pushy!





Adorable, right? I know it's way too early to tell for sure, but at least in my mind, Grendel is a "he!"
 
I have a question for all you pros. I just got my first silkies about a month ago. My question is, can you bath or wash silkies? I don't know where i heard you can but i was woundering if it's true? I have splash, white and black. They seem to be getting realy dirty and crusty. If someone could let me know what to do about that it would be great. They are so fluffy and they get kind of grubby, lol, just like little kids. Thanks to who ever started this thread.

Very easy to bathe. Dog shampoo works well, the kind with flea control helps with mites, lice etc. Sun to dry or blow dry being careful not to get close enough to singe feathers. Baby shampoo for face.
 
this is my 3m/o silkie it has a comb and wattles and my other chicks do not... so, which sex is this one because it seems to have a round fuzzy top like a hen but a raised comb like a roo. the other chicks have a flat spot where the comb should be. also, what do you look for to know what is show quality and what is not? thank you for any advice you can give me in advance! reply or pm me please
That touch of red, this early, says male. Pretty boy!
 
It is hard to tell from photos of adult silkies, since their combs are generally covered by their wild hair, but I am thinking my little two month old blue is a roo - he has, what seems to me, a HUGE comb on his little face, and he is super pushy!





Adorable, right? I know it's way too early to tell for sure, but at least in my mind, Grendel is a "he!"
Very cute! Likely boy.
 
HELP-- I just got in my shipped eggs from a breeder. They were absolutely PERFECT and she did an excellent job of bubble wrapping each egg. HOwever, when I was unrolling one, it slid out the bottom of the bubble wrap and landed on another egg. The egg that dropped got a crack!!!! The other egg is fine. So what I can put over that crack and hope for the best??? I've been reading and have seen people tell others to use Nail polish and wax.... is that right?? Or wrong?? I want to fix it in a hurry!

ETA--- just read someone said they used a Glue stick??? Not sure what to use.
 
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