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Chiccadees3

Yet to worm - worried

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I have had my 3 exbats for 3 months now and I have yet to worm them. I do have some flubenvet which my vet says to put a quarter of a teaspoon into 1kg of food and mix mix mix.

 

Does it affect my chickens directly in anyway or am I just being a paranoid owner :?

 

I was going to start on saturday - just need some reassurance I think!

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Don't worry about it, and I would definitely recommending starting it as soon as you can.

 

See my thread on the Chicken Clinic about worms to convince you to start.

 

I gave Flubenvet just sent to me by the Breeder and started it on Sunday as a precaution. My thread tells you the rest, and confirms it's never too early to worm your girls!!!!

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This is what I got direct from the Manufacturer as I wasn't sure either, but as Sandyhas3Chucks says everyone does it slightly differently and I'm sure the advice from your Vet is also correct :) The Manufacturer instructions don't differ from ex-batts so assume it's the same for all as there should be no reason it's different?

 

I also know someone who takes a dried mealworm dips in water and then the Flubenvet - seems to work for her and she sees it like a sherbet dip!

 

As I clearly have a worm issue with my girls I'm doing again in 3 weeks and then again in 10 weeks time and then 8-10 weeks from thereon in.

 

 

Dosage and administration

 

Relates to 1 % (w/w) white, medicated premixture containing 10 mg/g flubendazole in a 60 g tub with a 6 g scoop.

 

 

Dosing Instructions

 

Medicated feed should be fed for 7 consecutive days.

Incorporate the required amount of the product into the daily feed ration.

 

The daily ration should be fed as a "complete ration" during the 7 days. At the inclusion rates in the table below, for chicken and geese the ration will contain 30 ppm flubendazole and for turkeys 20 ppm.

 

Dosage

 

Chicken and Geese Turkeys

 

60 g of product (the whole tub) medicates 20 kg of feed

60 g of product (the whole tub) medicates 30 kg of feed

30 g of product medicates 10 kg of feed 18 g of product medicates 9 kg of feed

6 g of product medicates 2 kg of feed 6 g of product medicates 3 kg of feed

 

A level measure of the scoop included = 6 g of

wormer.

Use the scoop to measure the correct amount of product to mix into the feed as per the table above.

 

The dosage is dependent on the amount of feed that each bird consumes over the 7-day treatment period. Larger birds eat more feed and receive more medication according to their weight.

 

 

Mixing advice

The volume of product to be mixed into the feed is small. Mix very well for even distribution.

Initially, mix the required volume of product into a cup of feed. Mix very well. Add this to a bowl of feed and mix very well. Repeat twice more, every time into a larger volume of food. Mix well

 

Treatment frequency

 

Birds on the ground with known worm infestations are susceptible to re-infestation. In such cases, re-treatment with another 7-day course, after 3 weeks is recommended.

Edited by Guest
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Thanks! Quarter of a teaspoon just seems a bit small but like someone has said i think it also depends on what strength of flubenvet is used. I use one of those kitchen measuring spoons which helps. By the details you have been given it shoudl be 3g but a quarter of a teaspoon is not 3g, more like 1g :? . Not sure what strength it is as he has given me 25g. I thinkit says 20g per gramme on the bottle but even withme being a scientist I am not sure what this means :?

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Only read fast Sammy but which strength flub have you got and therefore the instructions for, and do we know if the instructions per weight etc are the same for both as I would at a guess think not!

 

My cut and paste missed it off - its a 1 % (w/w) white, medicated premixture containing 10 mg/g flubendazole in a 60 g tub with a 6 g scoop.

 

I've just updated my post to include this too.

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