Allotment Gardening Advice Help Chat
Poultry and Pets => The Hen House => Topic started by: Selkie on September 03, 2007, 19:13
-
hi,
have just been doing a bit of a 'health-check' on dora and noticed that she has lice :shock: ...but i couldn't see any on daisy.
hubby will be going to the vet tomorrow for spray/powder; i know we will have to treat both hens but do we have to use the product on their henhouse too?
is this likely to be something that keeps coming back?
i would really welcome any suggestions/advice...(thanks for the info on the 'external parasites' page)
-
It depends on the product.
Lice unlike mites tend to live on the bird in the main They are spread by wild birds as well as from hen to hen.
I use a product which is called Mite- Kill. Its sold for treatment of wooden surfaces but I also use it directly on the bird. Its not licensed for use on the birds but I use it and very effective it is to.
Its sold in aerosol at many agricultural merchants.
-
an update....we got some ivermectin (I think) from the vet and made up two solutions - a stronger one to spray on their house and bedding, and a weaker one to spray on the girls themselves.
hens weren't too happy about being sprayed! the vet said we should do this again in a couple of weeks, which will be fun :wink:
we get crows and magpies coming into the run to steal the hens food so I guess that's where the lice have come from?
hope this is a success...both girls have stopped laying eggs; think it's a combination of having builders working over them, the lice and the fact that they seem to be moulting -- could see lots of lovely new feathers coming through --is that right????
-
cant ivermectin be dangerous on such a small animal
i use it for my horse and im sure that pet smart do a very very mild version for rodents.
but i would have thought it would be all to easy to overdose a small animal.
hopefully someone will be along soon who knows more.
its not something i would try to dilute down on my chooks
-
ivermectin is ok but dont eat the eggs or meat .it werks similiar to frontline.a couple 3 drops of the product on the chickens neck close to the head .there has been a few cases where the cocks went infertile but i cant say its happened to me :) my pheasants all worked thier socks off
-
Ivermectin is not licenced for poultry in the UK so there is no published egg/meat withdrawal time. Did your vet give you any advice about this ? As Munty says, don't eat the eggs or meat but you will have to ask the vet how long.
-
thanks for the replies - he didn't say anything about not eating the eggs until i asked how long we should wait :roll: -- then he said to leave it a week. we have to spray them again in two weeks (and then wait another week before we can use the eggs).
our vets are more used to dealing with sheep/cows; don't think they'd ever had someone come to them with lice on a hen...he had to do a bit of research before he gave us the stuff.
both girls have actually stopped laying at the moment so i guess it doesn't matter about the eggs. they WEREN'T happy at all about being sprayed but seem ok now.
does anyone have any idea of how fast this stuff works? i haven't looked to see if the lice have gone, thought it was better to leave the girls' feathers unruffled for a couple of days (they've been through enough!)
rosemary
-
me again (isn't it a bit sad replying to your own post... :oops: )
i should say that he gave us undiluted ivermectin and said to dilute so much of it in so much water, to make up a spray and then to only spray 50ml of this dilution on each bird. the same with the stuff to spray in their house and over their bedding (but a stronger concentration)
just incase anyone thinks i've been spraying it undiluted on the girls
-
i use it undiluted ....... couple drops on the birds necks ,,,,, and i wont touch the eggs for 4 weeks the meat for 2 mths after last application :wink:
-
me again...
having sprayed the hens with the diluted solution a couple of weeks ago I've checked them over and can't see any lice on them now.
the vet said to re-apply the spray after two weeks but is this necessary if i can't see any creepy crawlies?
i don't have great confidence in my vet when it comes to poultry so i would really welcome feedback here!
thanks
rosemary
-
I'd retreat them if I were you. It can take a week or so for the nymphs to hatch and they will be very small and hard to see. Re treating will kill them and you will not find you have a reinfestation in a few weeks time when the critters are big enough to see :!:
-
you may not see them but they can hide down on the follicles of the emerging feathers . spray anyways .. that way they wont be coming back in a hurry :)