Rescue Pekin sounds like a guinnea pig???

Thanks! I'm still trying to decide what to do about this since I've never seen any indications of worms. Is there a reason you choose the end of October? My vet said it doesn't hurt to do it in April and October. I didn't understand the April part since that's the middle of our laying season, but I didn't even think to ask about that because my focus was on the sick duck.
I just do my water fowl by a reputable goose breeder s info she use to come on BYC raises Sebastopol geese but she had alot of health problems and I haven't seen her at all this year. But she says you worm before breeding season for geese, and since all my flock share feeders I figure this is the best time to worm for the year. no one is laying and I mix the wormer into their feed for 5 days. [safe Guard for sheep] @casportpony speaks highly of it.
Wazine kills only round worms. I used numerous other Natural products from the worm pellets can't remember the name right now they are from UK to DE but my chickens still got round worms. and k says Safe guard is very safe so I use it on the ducks and geese since I can mix it into their feed and Valbazen at the other 2 times since I can use a small needleless syringe to treat all my chickens with. I will not stick my hand inside my gooses mouth.
 
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@Miss Lydia where do you buy the Safeguard? Is it the kind sold in pet stores for dogs?
It is the same thing but you can get the kind I use the liquid or paste at feed stores the paste is for horses and comes in a long syringe and I have used it a few times but when you have so many to worm isn't feasible so I get the liquid now. for goats When I wormed my dogs a while back I talked with casportpony and she said I could just use the same safeguard for goats I use for the flock. so I did. I haven't heard of quacks meaning their could be parasites, when my lil roo got gape worms he lost his crow completely.
 
I just do my water fowl by a reputable goose breeder s info she use to come on BYC raises Sebastopol geese but she had alot of health problems and I haven't seen her at all this year. But she says you worm before breeding season for geese, and since all my flock share feeders I figure this is the best time to worm for the year. no one is laying and I mix the wormer into their feed for 5 days. [safe Guard for sheep] @casportpony speaks highly of it.
Wazine kills only round worms. I used numerous other Natural products from the worm pellets can't remember the name right now they are from UK to DE but my chickens still got round worms. and k says Safe guard is very safe so I use it on the ducks and geese since I can mix it into their feed and Valbazen at the other 2 times since I can use a small needleless syringe to treat all my chickens with. I will not stick my hand inside my gooses mouth.

I think I might try what you do with the October only. I know I don't want to do it during laying season. I'm really leaning toward a topical because I don't want to give my sick little girl something like that, assuming she even survives for that long.
 
Worms, wormers and fecals...

Of course I'm all for having fecals done, but one will often get false negatives, and I can point you to a thread where someone almost lost their peahen to capillary worms and coccidia because of a false negative.

Most worms are too small to see and the different types of worms can live the esophagus, crop, proventriculas, gizzard, intestines and I think there is a fluke the lives in the repro tract.

Wazine (piperazine) treats large roundworms, that's it.

Safeguard (fenbendazole) will treat almost all worms, but must be given several days in a row at a fairly high dose.

Valbazen (albendazole) will treat almost all worms with just one dose. For gapeworms, I think it's three days.

Ivermectin is no longer an effective poultry wormer and I can point you to necropsy pictures of birds that were treated with it. Can also post links of studies on it.

-Kathy
 
Ok, knowing all of that now - I am on the fence about just treating her. I would hate to throw away eggs for two weeks for no reason. That would be 6+ dozen eggs lost. Maybe I will just keep a close eye on her for a while, and see if there are any other symptoms. Like I said, she seems perfectly healthy - good weight, clear eyes, bill, legs, good feather quality. Maybe I am jumping the gun here?
 
Ok, I found a large animal vet that doesn't specialize in birds, and doesn't see ducks - BUT - they will run a fecal sample for me and give me the results for $25. That seems fair. I think that will be my next step. Thanks for the help everyone! I will come back with the results - hopefully later today.
 
Worms, wormers and fecals...

Of course I'm all for having fecals done, but one will often get false negatives, and I can point you to a thread where someone almost lost their peahen to capillary worms and coccidia because of a false negative.

Most worms are too small to see and the different types of worms can live the esophagus, crop, proventriculas, gizzard, intestines and I think there is a fluke the lives in the repro tract.

Wazine (piperazine) treats large roundworms, that's it.

Safeguard (fenbendazole) will treat almost all worms, but must be given several days in a row at a fairly high dose.

Valbazen (albendazole) will treat almost all worms with just one dose. For gapeworms, I think it's three days.

Ivermectin is no longer an effective poultry wormer and I can point you to necropsy pictures of birds that were treated with it. Can also post links of studies on it.

-Kathy

I'm switching vets.
 

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