BastyPutt
Yes, your Polish is a cockerel...
Consider this - and this has all been generally touched on, but I will summarize in hopes that it helps.Thank you so much! So would you recommend getting medicated feed or do you personally prefer to stick to non-medicated?
the main debate advocating for medicated feed is the prevention of cocci.
The way a chick or chicken fends off cocci is a naturally occuring bacteria in their gut. A chick isn't born with any said bacteria, and their bodies only develop it in response to exposure to the parasite. What the amproluim is thought to do is weaken the parasite, allowing the chick a better chance at generating the healthy bacteria.
It is safe to assume these bacteria are everywhere, because we know there are millions of chickens living cocci free.
With that said, I've learned on BYC to allow everyone to come to their own conclusion based on their flocks circumstances.
For me, I believe practicing good husbandry and brooder cleanliness (and especially hygiene after handling the grown flock to the babies) allows the chicks exposure to the right amount of the parasite and they develop a healthy amount of bacteria. We have never fed medicated feed and ever have had a cocci incident.
If you chose to feed medicated, that is fine, but there are two things to consider.
1. It is recommend that you titrate the feed off 10% each day, over 10 days before putting the chicks outside. The idea of course is that their naturally immunity will begin to fill in the gap left from the medication.
2. If your chicks happen to have the cocci vaccine, the amproluim will negate it as the vaccine will for the amproluim. So nether will doing anything for your chick. The cocci vax is getting more and more rare, and usually only available from a hatchery if requested, but you never know about the feed store bins.
Hope this helps, sorry if it was redundant.