Today I wormed our chickens and I thought I'd do a quick video with me worming one of our gorgeous girls, Sylvia, and give you some insights into what I do and why. Why Worming Matters Chickens naturally pick up worm eggs from the soil/dirt, insects, droppings and shared yards. Worms can cause: *Weight loss or poor/slow growth *Dropped egg production *Pale combs *Diarrhoea or messy bottoms *Lethargy ***In severe cases it can lead to anaemia or even death. Routine worming helps keep your flock strong, , healthy, productive and laying. How Often to Worm *Every 3 months (seasonally) *More often if: They are free range Wet or muddy ground You notice symptoms You bring new birds into the flock Most Common Types of Products (in Australia) Medicated seed. It's easy for flocks but less precise dosing Worm Gel - Liquid gel. Gentle and effective Liquid - Moxidectin/Levamisole (eg; Kilverm). Add to the chickens clean fresh drinking water. Worm tablets for chickens - (eg; Avitrol Plus tablets). Individual tablets therefore more precise dosing. Especially when you don't know how much water your chickens actually drink and how often. You can't know if they have had enough to be properly dosed. I use the Avitrol plus tablets. Quick, easy, one single dose, less waste and more cost effective. How to Administer Worm Tablets 1. Try and catch the chicken calmly. For chickens that aren't used to being handled, doing it when it becomes dark and they have roosted, is easier as they can't see very well in the dark and less like to get jumpy. You can wrap them in a towel. 2. Place the tablet in the open beak gently using your thumb and forefinger at the corners. 3. Place the tablet as far back as possible so they swallows it. 4. Let them swallow and hold her for 1-3 seconds to ensure it safely goes down her throat. 5. Dos each bird with a standard does which is one tablet per adult bird. (Read label and follow instructions accordingly). 6. Ensure you keep track of date of worming and who you wormed as you go. 7. Repeat only if required in 7-14 days to kill hatching larvae. 8. Withhold eggs if label instructs. Many products have zero egg withholding, but some may have 3-7 days.