Odd poop slurry

Painter_Jane

Songster
May 23, 2020
50
45
106
Currituck, NC
IMG_9196.jpeg

Hi guys! This is a strange question. I have a faverolle and she has been pooping like this for more than a year. I’ve treated her for worms, we did figure out we had some mites and they are gone, she’s currently on the fourth day of treatment for vent gleet after the mites gave her that. But her poops still look like this. There’s no definition between urates and stool. It’s like somebody put her poop in a blender. I do plan on taking her to a vet to figure out if she has some kind of infection or something but have you seen poop like this?! It’s been a chronic thing. I have not seen photos like this in reference images for normal/sick stools. Let me know if you’ve seen something like this! My other girls have zero issues but I am moving 4 chicks into the chicken area soon so I want to make sure it’s not an issue that’s contagious.
 
What's her diet? What and what dosage did you treat the worms with?

I used 1.5ml of safeguard goat dewormer for half a gallon of water for 3 days (my 3 hens were all treated). Our cat had been diagnosed with tapeworm about six months ago so they’ve been treated a couple of times. We used this dewormer because it treats most types of worms including tapeworm.

They eat purina flockraiser. And right now I’m adding a tablespoon of ACV in their water and an electrolyte/probiotic/vitamin combo in their water.
 

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I used 1.5ml of safeguard goat dewormer for half a gallon of water for 3 days (my 3 hens were all treated). Our cat had been diagnosed with tapeworm about six months ago so they’ve been treated a couple of times. We used this dewormer because it treats most types of worms including tapeworm.

They eat purina flockraiser. And right now I’m adding a tablespoon of ACV in their water and an electrolyte/probiotic/vitamin combo in their water.
Ok, you will want to reworm, you can't add the wormer to water, it needs to be dosed individually.
 
SafeGuard liquid goat wormer settles out in water, so it should not be given orally. The dosage for chickens is 0.23 ml ((1/4 ml) per pound of weight for 5 days if treating round worms cecal, gape, and capillary worms. If it is given once and again in 10 days it will treat roundworms.
 
SafeGuard liquid goat wormer settles out in water, so it should not be given orally. The dosage for chickens is 0.23 ml ((1/4 ml) per pound of weight for 5 days if treating round worms cecal, gape, and capillary worms. If it is given once and again in 10 days it will treat roundworms.
What does that mean for 3 5lb chickens?
 

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