You have to do the bedding and the birds. Then you have to do it again once a week for a few weeks.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 precautions
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You have to do the bedding and the birds. Then you have to do it again once a week for a few weeks.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 precautions
I'm sure it was not the DE that deterred the mites but rather the Raid with pyrethrum. I had some birds that were severely infested. I thought they were just molting but weren't getting their feathers back in when I discovered they had mites. The first thing I tried was DE. The birds weren't improving and still had mites. I first discovered them in only one coop but eventually found them on birds in another coop. I dusted the birds and the coops with the DE and no improvement. I did use some seven dust that I had but it was almost gone but it did help. I did some research and came up with permethrin, which is the pyrethrum on steroids. It lasts longer than pyrethrum. I did a weekly spraying for awhile and put permethrin dust in the nest boxes. Slowly the birds began to recover and get their feathers back in. I think if I hadn't treated with the permethrin when I did I probably would have lost some birds to the mites. The birds were in bad condition. I did originally bathe the worst birds with flea shampoo which did help but did not get rid of the mites but then discovered that the over the counter head lice shampoo for people also contained either pyrethrum or permethrin. The added benefit was no egg withdrawal period, and the birds are beautiful again.Personally, I have had success dusting them with diatomaceous earth, around the vent and under wings. Also make sure they have somewhere to dust bathe. I add some DE and wood ash to the sand under their coop where it always stays dry. If I suspect mites I also clean the coop out and spray the roost bars and corners with Raid with pyrethrum. Good luck.
I feed the wild birds a few hundred feet from my coops and get very few in there with my chickens. But I have to say my chicken littles would see a treadle feeder as a certain death trap.A lot of good methods of dealing with the mites has already been posted but has anyone brought up WHY you have mites to begin with?
Wild birds.... there is no reason why wild birds would come around a chicken coop if the feed is secured in a good treadle feeder. Water maybe, but that is usually available in plenty of places. Even better is having a coop tight enough that the wild birds can't enter but if you free range you have to get the wild birds to forage for natural food instead of hanging around your coop.
Smart tactic, feeding them away from the coop. And yes, tiny chickens and treadle feeders do not work well together. Two pounds and above, should be fine. In that one situation a feeder like the feed o matic might not deter the rats but it is safer for the bantams and silkies. The soft close door feeder would help keeping the smaller birds safe but having rats is a risk and there is a small risk using a treadle feeder to keep the rats away.