- Mar 20, 2016
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Thanks for the tips! I actually switched to medicated feed. And good idea with the coffee grinder, I'll try that. The chicks at this point seem to be doing great! Hopefully they stay healthy.RBC, so sorry to hear you are having such a hard time with your first experience. Another factor you may want to consider is the chick feed. I can't remember if you were the one who said someone told you medicated feed was for introducing new chicks to established ones but that incorrect. Medicated feed contains small amounts of Amprollium (sp?), a low dose antibiotic that helps the chicks build a resistance to cocci. It is not a guarantee they will never get the disease, but it is a potential preventative. I always use medicated feed but that is my personal preference.
Another thing I do is grind my chick feed smaller in a coffee grinder. I have noticed over the past few years that the chick feed granules keep getting larger, which makes the chicks waste much more feed looking for pieces small enough for them to be able to swallow. They could be getting weak & dying from starvation.
I think Jim is correct that your mailed chicks were much more stressed from the cold & possible rough handling, or just being in a shipping box for too long, but then add too large of a crumble and that might be the reason they are still dying for you. In any case, I commend you for not giving up. Raising your own chickens from chicks is a very pleasant experience when everything goes right. You just happened to have some bad luck, but soon you will be a successful, experienced chick raiser.
If you are not fussy on breed & do not mind if the birds do not live that long, TSC has "assorted pullets" which are egg production birds. They will lay eggs like crazy but they burn out and die at a very young age (2-3 years old). They are usually healthy chicks. If you get any of their straight run birds, be prepared for about 80% roosters, give or take.
Good luck & welcome to the Cheesehead thread!