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I'm glad she has a big support system to rally around her. When my mom broke her leg in March, it certainly helped having a lot of support. It will just take time to heal. Patience is key!!!
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The only reason HV might have a no-laptops restriction would be for the same reason they don't want people wearing valuable jewelry: there's a certain class of utter slime who steal things from hospital patients and visitors, may they rot in wherever.

Not HV, but speaking of cell phone chargers, anyone who has to use the surgical waiting room at Virginia Mason needs to bring their cell phone charger; the current location was, back five or six remodels ago, the bottom of an air shaft: it has four thick exterior walls and a concrete ceiling and your poor cell phone drains its battery looking for service in about an hour (my husband was in surgery for fourteen hours on two different days).
 
I guess no one read my post about Eprinex a few days ago. I posted where I got it and the dosages! But I've only been reading a few pages now and then so maybe thats what everyone else does and missed it. Dells has it in the cattle section. Pretty much the same price as Jeffers. Don't you have to have a minimum order of $100 to get free shipping at jeffers? I guess you pay tax at Dells but at least you wouldn't have to wait to have it shipped. I don't know if all the Dells have it but you could call first.
 
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Here is a great way to eat the boys w/o plucking any feathers.
OK this is such a wrong thing for me to do...
You take the dead bird and pack it with clay. about one inch thick of the mud. Then throw it in the fire to cook. No seasoning needed.
When it is ready, you just crack it open and it should be moist inside and the feathers are in the clay. The clay would sound dry if you thump it. I would cover the entire lump of mud incase it pops.
HOBO CHICKEN. I've not tried it...(Vegetarian now), but when I was much younger, my mom took chicken and seriously wrapped it in paper & tin foil to cook the chicken in a big wok of very hot rock salt.
It was delish. My brother cooked a hobo chicken when he we in boy scouts. They had to go steal, slaughter and cook a chicken and "survive" in the mosquito infested woods for a weekend. (chicken was prepaid to the villagers of course)
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Free range malayasian chickens are hard to catch. Those skinny legs run like raptors on steroids.
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I'd just forgo the needle altogether and use the bare syringe nipple for safety's sake; if you feel like you need the extra length for surety of reaching the skin, you can cut the point off with a hack saw** or grind it down with a Dremel fine flat disc grindstone or even file it off*. Vet needles are cheap, and Ivermectin pour on stings even on unbroken skin; no sense in keeping the point for reuse and hurting the chicken, especially because any OUCH to any animals tends to quickly turn into an OUCH for the humans handling it.

*Best not to cut needles with utility shears/tin snips/wire cutters because the tips fly off and lie in wait for bare feet, hands, or inquisitive chickens. If you do it that way, put the whole needle on a strip of duct tape, and then fold the tape over the loose point so it can be disposed of without poking through the garbage bag. ** The tape thing also works for hack saws although it gums up the teeth.
 
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OMG THAT'S COOL!! Didn't have that technology when I was pregnant! That is so cool! Glad she's well!
 
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We're vaccinating and worming 75 calves every spring, plus their mommies and all the bulls/replacements/steers for custom locker meat/oh yeah pigs so I forget that there's any Jeffer's order without free shipping.
 
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You'd think that cat or dog Advantage (which is Imitacloprid and not Ivermectin) would be more appropriate for chickens than a bovine wormer because of body size and skin thickness, although it looks as if it's toxic to Japanese Quail which puts up a red flag for other gallinaceous birds. Unfortunately the Ivermectin artical at Wikipedia stinks , so I'll have to google around and figure out the dog wormer which uses it.

One thing I notice from reading both Wiki articles is that there's a totally ass-backwards risk assessment; Imitacloprid has a relatively small margine between the effective and lethal doses in most animals, whereas Ivermectin is extremely safe except in a cluster of herd dog breeds and some reptiles.

When my brain is not sucking fumes I'll try to chase down a higher level of info, but Wikipedia does hold its attractions when I'm so sleep deprived that I've got trailing rainbows across my visual field for any moving target (which since I don't touch-type is a bit of a nuisance).

There are BYCers all over the planet raving about Eprinex...and have used it with fantastic results, so next time that is the route I go, especially the no egg waite AND ease of application verses the Ivermectin injectible...yuk, or Ivermectin soluble drops in the mouth..what a hassel that is...counting drops in a wiggling hens mouth, especially when you have so many birds !
NOTE: I always do the Wazine treatment first, suppose to relieve a good portion of the parasite load first, then a few days later do the Ivermectrin or Eprinex.

I ordered some eprinex last week. I'm so mad at myself - I threw out 24 bottles of Ivermectin - enough for hundreds of cattle! I used to have llamas and a friend of mine who ran the animal research lab at another pharmaceutical company sent me 2 CASES of 250mL bottles because they were also moving from using animal tissues to using cloned cell-lines and had no use for the Ivermectin anymore. It was a year out from the expire date, but the large animal vet said the stuff does not really expire (I found that to be true of most of the pharmaceutical products we used at work - companies are required to put an exiration date on products, but if the packaging has not been opened, it is not likely to break down without any contaminants growing in it. Some chemicals are light sensitive, so I store everything in the dark. Some may break down at a rate of maybe 10% per year. Antibiotics do break down, so I always get rid of those.)

I need to to the wazine treatment, but my girls are laying so well now! I want to wait until some of my chicks start laying so I won't be without eggs! I wonder when the last time was that the BCM from zgoatlady and RFF's Light Sussex were wormed? Maybe I can still get eggs from 2 birds... How old do the chicks need to be before they can be wormed? My hens are 9-10 months old and I've seen nothing to suggest they may be carrying a heavy load of worms, but I would hate to kill the hens off by using Eprinex first.
 
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I'd just forgo the needle altogether and use the bare syringe nipple for safety's sake; if you feel like you need the extra length for surety of reaching the skin, you can cut the point off with a hack saw** or grind it down with a Dremel fine flat disc grindstone or even file it off*. Vet needles are cheap, and Ivermectin pour on stings even on unbroken skin; no sense in keeping the point for reuse and hurting the chicken, especially because any OUCH to any animals tends to quickly turn into an OUCH for the humans handling it.

*Best not to cut needles with utility shears/tin snips/wire cutters because the tips fly off and lie in wait for bare feet, hands, or inquisitive chickens. If you do it that way, put the whole needle on a strip of duct tape, and then fold the tape over the loose point so it can be disposed of without poking through the garbage bag. ** The tape thing also works for hack saws although it gums up the teeth.

Yep, I don't use needles with Eprinex either. And actually, I've also stopped using syringes with it, because the Eprinex quickly eats at the rubber on the plunger and makes it REALLY hard to depress the plunger. I use an eye-dropper that has 1/4 and 1/2cc marks on it. You can check with your vets office and see if they have any laying around from Clavamox or Amoxicillin drops.
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