I saw one wormy poop, followed a few weeks later by a sickly hen, who wasn't eating, was hunched up and puffed out, and clearly underweight. Delisha told me to give her olive oil, which I did. I gave her a few drops of kerosene in her water, and in a few days she was back to normal. I think it was Delisha's olive oil dose that did the trick, although I don't understand why. I wondered if she had a worm overload - and two of the other wellies were clearly underweight too. So....I tried kerosene in the water for one day for the whole flock. I did not see any more worms, but there are plenty of places for wormy poops that I wouldn't see.I purchased the basic H but have never use it. I'm taking the "if it ain't broke don't fix it" stance on this.
But sometimes I wonder if I should use it maybe a couple times a year for prevention. Not sure what I think about that at this point.
Lala - refresh my memory - were you seeing worms regularly before?
It is the underweight part that makes me think worms. Am going to follow up with the soapy water but given that it is RAINING!! on top of all this snow I don't think they will drink from the waterers, so I am going to wait a few days to see if it gets colder, and they will be more likely to drink from the waterer.
I know in the 20's, my grandmother gave her dishwater to the chickens or the pigs. Not sure if it was thriftiness, to get every last little bit of food value, or if there was a thought about the soap being good for them. Course that wasn't the soap we have today, but am thinking a castile soap would be ok.
Heard that every chicken has worms, but have also heard from plenty of folks doing necropsy's or butchering who say they didn't see any worms. Worm overload = wight loss and poor condition. Wellies are too thin, does that = worm overload? Or is it due to low protein? And how long does it take for a hen to put on weight?