valbazen egg withdraw time & dosage

Drk_Wlf

Songster
10 Years
May 11, 2009
321
0
129
Chautauqua County, NY
I am planning on de-worming my flock with some valbazen. I de-wormed them with some wazine about 2 mth ago, but just to be on the safe side I figured I would de-worm them with some valbazen as well. What is the egg withdraw time? and instead of throwing the eggs away could I incubate them instead? Also I saw someone said the dosage is 1/2 cc is this correct?

Thank You
 

dawg53

Humble
Premium Feather Member
14 Years
Nov 27, 2008
29,858
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Glen St Mary, Florida
Quote:
Yes, dosage is 1/2cc for standards, 1/4cc for smaller chickens...14 days is the withdrawal time. I dont know if you can incubate the eggs or not, sorry.
 

kathyinmo

Nothing In Moderation
12 Years
May 14, 2009
24,541
365
476
(SW MO) Nevada, Missouri
My Coop
My Coop
I copied and saved this post from Pine Grove .....

Valbazen which is a cattle wormer is the best I've ever used..It kills more types of worms than all the others combined, And you don't have to worry about a massive worm kill like with piperazine or ivermectin which will sometimes clog the intestines..Valbazen slowly starves the parasites over a 2 to 5 day period..Valbazen is also used for human treatments at 400 mg child or adult..So unless you are allergic to it I'ts ok to consume the eggs after treatment, But I and all I know wait two weeks ..I'ts pricey at around $40.00 per bottle but well worth it

Dosage is 1/2 cc orally to adult large fowl.. 1/4 cc for bantams and young standard breeds​
 

Drk_Wlf

Songster
10 Years
May 11, 2009
321
0
129
Chautauqua County, NY
Thanks! I think I am going to put the eggs in the bator, I just can't see throwing all the eggs out.
idunno.gif
 

farminchick

In the Brooder
5 Years
Jan 22, 2015
13
1
21
Just be careful using the bator. I've heard that incubating eggs when using wazine can create deformities :(
 

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