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beautifulchick
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- May 12, 2024
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Thank you! I did it again starting from 100ml and found the 0.37ml for the rooster like you, so you are correct, the smallest measuring syringe I have is 1ml. I look up in an big online farmacy and that's the smallest they have but I will go to a nearby farmacy tomorrow and I will ask if they have it or if they know where I can have it, I'm more afraid measuring the 0.05 for the chicks, I hope I won't overdose them.Yes.
I think up to that point the calculation is correct, though I have difficulty reading it (guess different countries don't write out the maths the same).
I don't find the same number.
I started from 100 ml of product contains 2000 mg of Praziquantel (2g).
1 ml of product will contain 20mg of Praziquantel.
You want 7.5 mg for the rooster. To get from the 20 mg in 1 ml to 7.5 mg : 20/7.5 =2.666.
To find the quantity of product needed, you need to divide 1 ml by 2.666 ; that is 0.37 ml of product.
Then from that I would do an average weight for the chicks of 150 grams so you just need to divide the dose by five for each chick. That is 0.07 mg which I am afraid will be hard to dose correctly.
If you have pharmacies or drugstore ask for the smallest measuring syringe they have.
The Pyrantel dose will actually be lower than it needs to be. Pyrantel kills the roundworms (nematodes, the longer worms in your picture) so if they survive, maybe in a few months you will need to dose them with the Piperazine you have.
For the starter feed, if they don't have it as a mash, one tip is to put it on the floor instead of in a plate.
But I wouldn't worry too much about that, although they do need nutrition. My chicks never accepted to eat starter feed until their broody had left them at six weeks because the momma did not let them and they were still healthy. I gave them like you scrambled egg, mixed crushed grains and healthy bread. I know not everyone agrees on this but my point of view is don't let them starve, better if they eat what they chose than if they don't eat at all.
Good- easier to use !
I hope the roundworms wont survive, but now I will be inspecting them better, I had so many plans before they hatch, I wanted to weight them, inspect them and take pictures one by one every day but they move so hard, they were so slippy, they cry so loud that the hen become crazy, she did not peck me but move like a lion in a cage making loud sounds and without thinking in crushing the ones that were with her, If I grab her first she hurts herself bumping in the wired cage, and it's cold too, and I did not want the chicks to get cold, it was stressing for both sides, so I decide it to let them be and watching them without touch them, I will try to make it better next time.
For the feed I give them dry and mashed, the mashed feed in a bowl of plastic bottle, the dry feed in a plastic bottle cut vertically an the border was like 0.5cm high but they flipped it over and everything was in the floor, I saw them looking for the scarce seeds(?) that are not completely grounded in the feed, at the end of the day for less than a minute the hen and one chick seemingly were eating the dry feed but I was not sure if they were specifically looking for some little crushed grains that I can't see.
In my case is the hen too that make that sound to not eat something and the chicks don't eat it. I hope they eat it when they are emancipated like yours, I'm glad yours have no problem with the food you gave them.
I will update in the night how it works the dewormer, I'll try to take pictures of the parasites. I hope everything goes well.
Thank you for taking your time to help me.