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- #11
- Jun 5, 2016
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DE is a little dangerous to use because it can irritate eyes and lungs of us and the chickens. When it gets wet inside the body, it becomes useless.
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DE is a little dangerous to use because it can irritate eyes and lungs of us and the chickens. When it gets wet inside the body, it becomes useless.
I am picking up safeguard on my way home tonight. Should I use the same dosage as you recommended for the Valbazen? And do it for 5 days straight? I am not sure what my chickens weigh. Not much. I will try to get on the scale with them. They are 3 1/2 months old.That is probably a large roundworm. Most wormers that are effective are given to each chicken individually, and are wormers for cattle, sheep, and goats. SafeGuard is one you may find in feed stores and Valbazen, which is more expensive but goes much farther, may be in some stores or online. The good thing about Valbazen is that it gets most worms with a dose of 1/2 ml for an average size chicken (0.08 ml per pound) given by mouth once and repeat in 10 days. Safeguard Liquid Goat Wormer is given once and repeated in 10 days for roundworms only. To get most possible chicken worms, it must be given for 5 straight days. These are very safe to use. Valbazen can be ordered here for $44 for 500 ml:
https://www.jefferspet.com/products/valbazen-broad-spectrum-dewormer
SafeGuard is carried by TSC and most feed stores.