Saraschickens
Chirping
- Dec 8, 2023
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Thank you, that was very descriptive. How many ml per bird with the Safeguard? I have from 1 lb chickens to 4.5 lb roosters.
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Ok, my smallest d'uccle(s) are probably under a pound. Would I give them a .25 ml dose? And what about a chicken that is 2.6 lbs? Or 4.5 lbs?Safeguard dose is .23 ml per pound of body weight, orally (most people round to .25 for simplicity). If you know you are treating roundworm or cecal worms you can do two doses 10 days apart. If you don't know what worm you are treating for, then use that dose 5 days in a row instead, to cover everything except tapeworm. Capillary worms and Gape worm require the 5 day in a row treatment. It's not effective for tapeworm, for those you need praziquantel. An inexpensive digital kitchen scale works well for getting weights.
Pumpkin seeds deworm chickens naturally. And chloride sodium dioxide drops in water will treat both parasites and worms internal.and external for future help if neededWhat do you suspect is wrong—coccidiosis, worms? Ivermectin is said to have lost some effect against worms, due to past overuse for mite treatment. It has an egg withdrawal time. SafeGuard 10% will treat most chickens worms with a dosage of 0.25 ml per pound given orally for 5 consecutive days. To treat only roundworms, give it once and then again in 10 days. It has a 14 day egg withdrawal time. Corid only treats coccidiosis. Dosage is 2 tsp of the liquid per gallon of water for 5 days.
Ok, my smallest d'uccle(s) are probably under a pound. Would I give them a .25 ml dose? And what about a chicken that is 2.6 lbs? Or 4.5 lbs?
Thank you. May I ask, if Safeguard is so safe, why do I need the dose to be so specific? I understand under dosing would cause resistant parasites and also may not kill the parasites they have, but it seems odd to me that I would need to be so specific down to the ounce. I have 72 chickens (and roosters), so to dose according to their specific weights would be impossible without weighing every single bird. Is there any other product I can use that I can put in the water or the food?1 lb = 16 oz. For your birds under a pound multiply their weight in ounces by 0.0156 to get the dose (1 lb =16 oz, 0.25 ml / 16 oz = 0.0156 ml per ounce) round up to the nearest measureable mark. If your bird is 14 oz that would come to 0.22 ml, I would round to .3 ml. You will need a 1 ml/cc oral syringe to get a good measurement that small. The marks on a 3 ml oral syringe will not be as accurate for an amount that small. If you don't have one, ask at your pharmacy, they usually have oral syringes. I buy mine on amazon in bulk.
For the larger birds, just multiply their weight by the 0.25. a 2.6 lb bird would get 0.65 ml (0.25 ml x 2.6 lb), I would do 0.65 ml or round to .7 ml. A 4.5 lb bird would get 1.125 ml ( 0.25 ml x 4.5 lb), I would round to 1.2 ml. Always round up, not down, to the nearest mark you can measure to. A little too much won't hurt them, under dosing can lead to resistant parasites.
My kitchen scale weighs in lbs and ounces or grams, so easy enough to get the weights.
I hope that's clear enough to help. I used 0.25 ml for ease of the math and measuring.
Fenbendazole is very safe to give to birds; studies have shown that a dosage up to 100 times the recommended dosage may have no side effects. However, ivermectin can be toxic to birds if the recommended dosage is exceeded. (Unlike with mammals where high dosages of Ivermectin have no side effects). So Ivermectin is the med you want to be careful with when medicating birds.And is it possible to overdose safeguard Paste?