Definitely figure out why it is wet I. your coop and fix that too. 

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Hello chicken folks! I've had an on-and-off-again issue with mites on my birds (doesn't seem too serious - am only seeing the little beasties near the vent area on my chickens - but I don't want it to get worse and I hate that my girls and boys have itchy things all over them).
Anyway, I have diatomaceous earth and when I apply it, it seems to work a little at first, but then the mites come back. Is this because I'm not applying it often enough, or is it just not that effective? How often should it be applied if mites are present in order for it to work well? Is there another product I should be using that is more effective but safe for my chickens and the environment? I really don't want to resort to Sevin dust because I know it is horribly toxic - as effective as it is. Do any of you out there have any products you swear by? Thanks!
I have had a light infestation with bird mite nearly 2 years after I started with chickens. I found a colony of monsters in the roost (under a piece of bark on a branch). Used mainly diatom (DE) and didnt use any chemicals to eliminate them.
After this I always check the coop at least once a week (except in winter).
- First I threw away the roosts and made 2 new roosts.
- Gathered all the coverage (wood shavings, hay, straw) in a plastic bag and put it in the garbage.
- I cleaned the coop thouroughly with soap and water. (a steam cleaner does even a better job).
- Then I made a kind of paint with water and DE and painted the inside of the coop with it. And dubbel on the roosts and the connection to the coop. Where I could see connections and cracks in the wood I put extra DEpaint too.
- Also painted the laying nests. I put a layer of sand with DE under the wood shavings and hay. And put some tabacco in.
- In the sand bath i put some DE too.
- And finally I carefully (do not inhale) I put some DE under their feathers. And did this again after 10 days.
- Checked every day. Found a few monsters. Painted such a spot.
- After 2 weeks I painted the coop again to maje a thicker layer.
Since this time I did find 2 times a few monsters (just 2 -5). Then I paint, put extra DE in the sand and control every day.
For me this works great untill now.
That is a good plan. You can spray it on the birds too. The label should have the dilution percentages. Spray around their vents, under wings, under feather of chest, neck and back. I haven't done this myself, but I don't think you need to drench them, just small sprays. I think @Folly's place can tell you for sure.Thanks for the feedback! I plan to clean out all their bedding on the floor (their coop just sits on the sand where I live - our property used to be a sand dune, so we are known for having lots of it around), as well as the nesting box material and will take down their curtains and wash those, too. I'm getting the liquid pyrethrin and a sprayer, so will be spraying down the entire interior of the coop and inside the nesting boxes and perches. Once everything has dried out, I might go ahead and sprinkle a bunch of DE around on the ground and in the nesting boxes before adding the new bedding. I'm also thinking about getting some pyrethrin dust (if I can find it) to keep on hand for the future.
I have had a light infestation with bird mite nearly 2 years after I started with chickens. I found a colony of monsters in the roost (under a piece of bark on a branch). Used mainly diatom (DE) and didnt use any chemicals to eliminate them.
After this I always check the coop at least once a week (except in winter).
- First I threw away the roosts and made 2 new roosts.
- Gathered all the coverage (wood shavings, hay, straw) in a plastic bag and put it in the garbage.
- I cleaned the coop thouroughly with soap and water. (a steam cleaner does even a better job).
- Then I made a kind of paint with water and DE and painted the inside of the coop with it. And dubbel on the roosts and the connection to the coop. Where I could see connections and cracks in the wood I put extra DEpaint too.
- Also painted the laying nests. I put a layer of sand with DE under the wood shavings and hay. And put some tabacco in.
- In the sand bath i put some DE too.
- And finally I carefully (do not inhale) I put some DE under their feathers. And did this again after 10 days.
- Checked every day. Found a few monsters. Painted such a spot.
- After 2 weeks I painted the coop again to maje a thicker layer.
Since this time I did find 2 times a few monsters (just 2 -5). Then I paint, put extra DE in the sand and control every day.
For me this works great untill now.
The tobacco is a great idea actually, the wild birds gather ciggie butts and line their nests to keep the mites away.
TS has the permethrin and it’s like $8...it’s over by cattle supplies. Directions are on bottles for how to use...good luck!!I'll probably have to spray them since the mites are on them, but I'll be sure to clean out the coop and spray it down, too. Thanks so much!
If you don’t do the bedding you may have to redo the birds...I don’t know...but I was warned this...so I took precautionsThanks for the details! I keep reading about treating them with the spray or dust, but not EXACTLY what to do. They are definitely mites (teeny-tiny crawly bugs) and I mostly see them around the vent area - and in the head feathers of my poor little Polish girls.
It's finally started raining here (I live on the California Coast and it's usually bone-dry) so I'm not sure if I can treat the run, but I should be able to treat the coop (there is a bit of water leaking in at the base, making the bedding damp, so I was going to wait and clean it out completely when we have a break in the weather - this coming weekend - then spray EVERYWHERE inside the coop before putting down bedding again).
I did find some external parasite dust in my chicken cabinet that is composed of permethrin, so I'll dust them with that (vent area and under wings) tomorrow - since my liquid pyrethrin won't be here until Friday.
Hoping this all works out! Never had a mite problem until earlier this summer. And to make things even more ''exciting'' around here, two of my pullets and my roo have bubbly eyes (read that was a viral infection and there is all kinds of advice on treating that, ranging from letting it run its course to getting antibiotics from the vet. Right now, I'm monitoring it to see if it gets worse. So far, I'm not seeing any lethargy - just one runny eye on each of them, with what appears to be swollen sinuses with one of the pullets and a slightly swollen eyelid on my roo. Still, they seem to be acting normal, otherwise).