Take what you can get. Just knowing if they are positive for worms will allow you to treat with an all species wormer. Knowing there are no worms will let you rule it out, and you won't need to bother worming. This is enough for now.
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Lately some of my birds have had the squirts and messy butts, like your birds but not all of them. It's due to the heat we're having. They're drinking more water and I've had to set out extra containers with ice water for them to drink. I usually set out the ice water around noon or 1pm when it really starts to heat up. Of course the ice melts but the water is still cool late in the afternoon. I have a box fan running under each coop and a fan inside each coop blowing hot air out a vent.My local vet is worthless. He'll do a fecal for $15 and tell you, yep you have worms, but no detail. I'm in the middle of nowhere, not many vets near. Several of my hens have messy butts and I've seen some squirts. The poop board shows splashy poops, not all of them but enough. I've put 2" of sand down under the coop and may put some down in the chicken yard itself. I have 1 roo, 8 hens and 3 chicks in a 900 sq ft enclosure, the coop is 8 X 12 and raised off the ground by 2 cement blocks. Plenty of space for the # of birds. I keep the grass fairly short, but there are wild birds there. I spent last night covering the entire run with bird netting, haven't finished yet, got maybe 1/3. but there are gaps that wild birds can get in, no way I can make it better than that with the current setup.
Too bad we dont live closer, I wouldve helped you.Had absolutely bad luck dosing the birds thus morning. Took one off the roost and under the carport (where there is light) to dribble safeguard into her, she bawked and struggled and woke the neighbors, didn't get any into her before giving up.... I finally broke bread into one piece per bird, dosed the bread and arranged it along the outer edge of a round pan, set it on the ground and, what do you know, they each grabbed a piece and ran off. each got their dose! And the babies stayed away and didn't get any at all. Since I did wazine 10 days ago I'm done, right?
The two wormers I would recommend, Valbazen and SafeGuard Liquid Goat Wormer are not water soluble, and will settle out. Thus, you need to dose each chicken separately. They treat other worms such as cecal worms, gapeworms, and capillary worms, while Wazine only kills roundworms. SafeGuard dosage for just roundworms is 1/4 ml per pound once orally and repeated in 10-14 days. It can be given for 5 straight days to treat capillary and gape worms. Since you gave Wazine already, it just needs to be given once.
Valbazen dosage is 1/2 ml (or 0.09 ml per pound) given once orally and again in 10-14 days. For both SafeGuard and Valbazen, (and Wazine) toss the eggs for 14 days after the last dose.
Is there any way to separate the chicks for the one day to use the Wazine in the water?