JK Guanzon Free Range Poultry Farm

JK Guanzon Free Range Poultry Farm This small poultry farm aims and collecting different breeds of poultry animals. Soon we will engage

Celery plant
26/09/2022

Celery plant

Please do watch my YouTube channel.I had some updates about my chickens,my cooking and Travels.https://youtube.com/chann...
26/06/2022

Please do watch my YouTube channel.I had some updates about my chickens,my cooking and Travels.
https://youtube.com/channel/UCUmPhkwqmeCOFkbmBRw8Nfw

chef to explore the world #❤ Heritage chicken and native chicken in the farm soon. secret menu the world for free.i will show here. #...

21/06/2022


buff orpington roaster x native
Rhode island Red x native
Upgrade success

Happy Farming🙂

     Happy Farming🙂
20/06/2022






Happy Farming🙂

15/05/2022

CTTO
Thanks admin.

Happy Farming ❤️
Guanzon
kin Guanzon
Dyrie Guanzon

15/05/2022

CTO.
Thanks admin
Additional knowledge to us.
Happy Farming.

Guanzon
kin Guanzon
Dymrie Guanzon

RIR chicksAvailableDM  Guanzon
09/11/2021

RIR chicks
Available
DM Guanzon

29/10/2021

chicks

19/10/2021

The seven (7) poultry rules that you may not know:

"If you can't drink that water, don't give it to your birds."

Do you have passion for poultry and really wish to stay long in the business? Then, obey these rules!

A.Rule (1)
.."Only order for birds you can conveniently take care of".
This is the most important rule of all.

Instead of stocking 500 birds and then struggle to feed them or give them medication, buy 200 ,feed and give them good medication.

Trust me, you'll make more profit than keeping 500 and struggling to feed and give the medication. If this happens, you'll battle with stunted growth, recurrent morbidity or disease outbreaks and high mortality.

B.Rule (2)
.."Never borrow money to start poultry business unless you are an expert".

Of course, there is no expert in poultry business. In fact, we learn everyday. Every stock you take in will always teach you something different. However, Haven learnt from all the different characteristics displayed by each stock, you get to know more and won't be excited when challenges come. You'll know how to handle them without much damage.

C.Rule (3)
.."Be vigilant".
The little things you don't take as anything matters.

If you want to succeed in poultry, you must take it as a real business. Do you know what a business man does every morning when he gets to his store? He pray, then open the store and go round to check if everything is in its place. He take stocks of what he met there and relate with his records yesterday before closing the store.

Don't just open your Pen and start rushing to give your birds feed and water and rush out again. Check around. Watch how they behave when you came in. Check what fell and what is no longer in its place.

D.Rule (4)
.."Never ignore warning signals".

Yes, I call them warning signals.

1.Bad smell
2.Withdrawal from feed
3.Moodiness
4.Withdrawal from water

There are numerous warning signals i can't mention here. In fact, they are so many

A farmer must know how his birds behaves when they see him enter the in the morning. How they behave when he serve them feed. He should know the very active terrors and gentle lambs

If you keep these signals, you'll easily spot when something is not right

E.Rule (5)
.."Never change feed indiscriminately!"

I know you do this. Yes, you.

When farmers talk about changing feed from this to this and that then this all in the name getting better result, I'm always scared for them.

Whether you are changing from a bad feed to a good one, you must be very careful.

Do you know every change in feed affect your bird negatively first before gradually bringing in the results you don't desire? Most of the times, you may suffer withdrawal, coccidiosis, feed wastage, stress and more.

Imagine changing from mash to Pellet indiscriminately. Do you know what that means? Have you studied the difference between mash and Pelleted feed and the process of digestion?

They may contain the same ingredients but the formulation process varies so is the digestion process.

Note:

I don't mean changing from starter to grower or finisher but changing from one commercial feed to another .e.g change from Ethiochicken / Alama to other brands.

Even whenever you need to change from starter to grower follow the rules 75% starter and 25% grower, then 50% grower and 50% starter and finally 75% grower and 25% starter. At the end you change 100% to grower feed. You can follow the same rule whenever you need to change from one phase feed to other. This one works for feed of the same brand too.

Each company use their own unique ingredients to make their feeds although they may give the same nutritional content. Before using any feed for your birds, find out first about the feed and make sure you stick with it.

F.Rule (6)
.."Never let your birds run dry of water".

Have you heard of heat stress? If it has happened to your birds then you'll understand what I'm saying.
Heat stress can wipe your entire flock. And it may leave your birds vulnerable to all kinds of infection as their immune system get weakened and may take more than 14 days to fully recover.
Your birds can survive 48 hours without feed but they can't survive 7 hours without water.
Instead of running out of water, please, run out of feed.

G.Rule (7)
.."If you can't drink that water, don't give it to your birds".

Some farmers takes chickens as they are just animals and nothing matters. Maybe they've forgotten they are dealing with delicate live animals.

Waterborne diseases are some of the deadliest disease and most difficult to control. Imagine a tiny drop of harmful substance inside the drinking water; it'll contaminate the whole water. If it was feed, it may not be that bad.

Please, if you can't drink that water, don't give it to your birds. I'm not talking about medicated water.

Keep following us👍

19/10/2021

Deadly poultry disease, treatment and prevention:

1.FOWL POX:

Fowlpox is the worldwide disease of poultry caused by viruses of the family Poxviridae and the genus Avipoxvirus. The viruses causing fowlpox are distinct from one another but antigenically similar, possible hosts including chickens, turkeys, quail, canaries, pigeons, and many other species of birds.

✓SYMPTOMS
Fowl pox can come in two forms wet or dry. In the dry form, unfeathered areas of your bird will have wart-like lesions that heal in about two weeks. The wet form of the disease features lesions appearing around the mouth and discharge from your bird’s eyes.

✓HOW TO TREAT
There is no treatment for fowl pox, but it will typically go away after a few weeks on its own. We suggest giving any sick chickens a little extra care to make sure they’re as comfortable as possible.

✓PREVENTION
There are special vaccines designed to prevent fowl pox in most birds, but if any birds show signs of infection, make sure to quarantine them. Also, make sure you control mosquitos in your chicken enclosures since they’re able to transmit the disease from flock to flock.
Infectious.

2.BRONCHITIS:

Inflammation of the lining of bronchial tubes, which carry air to and from the lungs.

✓SYMPTOMS
Just like humans, your chickens can get a cold, and it’s just as contagious. If your flock becomes infected, you’ll notice that egg production will drop, the consumption of food and water will decline, there may be a discharge from the birds’ eyes and nostrils, and you may notice labored breathing from your birds.

✓TREATMENT
Unfortunately, there’s not much that can be done for bronchitis. You can give your birds antibiotics for a few days to make sure no other infections happen while they’re sick, but otherwise you just have to wait it out.

✓PREVENTION
Like fowl pox, there are a few types of preventative vaccinations against infectious bronchitis, but it’s not a guarantee. Having a good biosecurity method in place, as well as adequate rodent control should help keep the disease to a minimum.

3.MAREK'S DISEASE:

Marek disease is a highly contagious viral disease of poultry characterized by T-cell lymphomas and peripheral nerve enlargement.

✓SYMPTOMS
This disease, also referred to as fowl paralysis, typically affects chickens between 12 and 25 weeks old. If your chick has developed tumors, has irregularly shaped pupils (typically results in blindness), or develops partial paralysis, it’s likely that they have Marek’s Disease.

✓TREATMENT
Since this poultry disease is a form of avian cancer, there is unfortunately not much that can be done for infected chicks.

It’s also contagious since it’s a virus and is transmitted when a chicken breathes in feather dander from another infected bird. If the bird survives, it will remain a carrier of the disease for life, so it’s best to remove it from the flock early.

✓PREVENTION
While this disease sounds scary, there are vaccines available. Newly hatched birds can be vaccinated for Marek’s disease to help reduce the likelihood of infection.

4.NEWCASTLE DISEASE:

Newcastle disease is a highly contagious disease of birds caused by a para-myxo virus. Birds affected by thisdisease are fowls, turkeys, geese, ducks, pheasants, partridges, guinea fowl and other wild and captive birds, including ratites such ostriches, emus and rhea.

✓SYMPTOMS
As a respiratory disease, symptoms of Newcastle (ND) tend to appear through breathing difficulties, nasal discharge, murky eyes, and a reduction in egg laying. Sometimes birds can experience twisting in their neck and paralysis in their legs and wings. There are varying strains of this poultry disease, some of which are more lethal than others.

✓TREATMENT
Birds will typically recover from ND and not be carriers, but if your chicks develop the disease, they will likely not survive. As with other diseases, you can give your birds antibiotics for a few days to avoid any other bacterial infections.

✓PREVENTION
Since the disease is carried by wild birds, keeping your flock vaccinated is very important. It’s also

recommended to practice good sanitation since a person can infect other birds via clothing or shoes.

5.COCCIDIOSIS:

Coccidiosis is a common protozoan disease in domestic birds and other fowl, characterized by enteritis and bloody diarrhoea. The intestinal tract is affected, with the exception of the renal coccidiosis in geese. Clinically, bloody faeces, ruffled feathers, anaemia, reduced head size and somnolence are observed.

✓SYMPTOMS
When your chicken has loose droppings, it’s likely they have coccidiosis, a parasite that damages the gut wall of chickens. In addition to loose droppings, you may also notice bloody or watery diarrhea, weight loss, and ruffled feathers in your chickens.

✓TREATMENT
Since there are six species of Eimeria (the coccidiosis parasite), your bird may become immune to one kind, but contract another. You can treat this with antibiotics or other specific types of medication that will get rid of the parasite.

✓PREVENTION
Keeping food areas, brooders, and coops clean and dry will help avoid the spread of coccidiosis. Using medicated starter feed for your unvaccinated chicks, or adding probiotic supplements to their food, is another way to help control this poultry disease.

RIR production typeBuff x native crossbreedParents attachedPm sa interestedHappy Farming🙂JK Guanzon Free Range Poultry F...
18/10/2021

RIR production type
Buff x native crossbreed
Parents attached
Pm sa interested
Happy Farming🙂
JK Guanzon Free Range Poultry Farm
Pm me for details Guanzon

PtpaThanks admin❤
15/10/2021

Ptpa
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Fowl Pox (Treatment & Prevention):

Fowl pox is a highly contagious viral infection in poultry that causes painful sores on a chicken’s skin.

Also referred to as Avian Pox, Sorehead, Avian Diphtheria and Chicken Pox, it is unrelated to human chicken pox and cannot be contracted by people from birds.

Fowl pox occurs in two forms, Dry and Wet pox and while there is no cure, Fowl Pox can be prevented and the symptoms treated.

1.Causes & Transmission:

Dry Fowl Pox is a viral infection that affects a chicken’s skin in non-feathered areas, most commonly, the comb, wattles, face and eyelids.

Wet Fowl Pox affects a bird’s upper respiratory system, eyes, mouth and throat and can be life-threatening.

The virus is transmitted to backyard chickens by biting insects, most notably, mosquitoes.

The virus is transmitted to other chickens within a flock through an infected bird’s feathers, feather debris, skin dander, sloughed-off scabs, scab secretions and blood (collectively referred to hereinafter as “hot debris“).

Fowl Pox is highly contagious & spreads slowly from chicken to chicken within a flock. The virus can persist in a flock for months, sometimes years, in hot debris.

Susceptible birds can become infected when hot debris is eaten, inhaled or makes contact with skin wounds or mucous membranes (eyeballs and mouths).

Initial stages of Dry Fowl Pox include ash colored, raised lesions or blisters on the comb, face and wattles. Blisters evolve into larger, yellow bumps and finally, dark colored, wart-looking scabs.

The scabs eventually resolve, leaving scars behind.
Some chickens acquire immunity, but others are susceptible to recurrences in times of stress.

2.Symptoms:

Chickens with Fowl Pox will often exhibit a drop in egg production, loss of appetite and/or weight loss in addition to the tell-tale lesions on the skin (dry fowl pox) or lesions inside the mouth and throat (wet fowl pox). Symptoms generally persist for several weeks in a bird and several months in a flock.

4.Treatment:

There is no cure for fowl pox, but there are comfort measures that can be provided for affected chickens as well as preventative measures to avoid secondary bacterial infections caused by the lesions.

Unaffected birds can be vaccinated during an outbreak.
Offer tetracycline antibiotics in the water to help control secondary infections.

Terramycin in drinking water for 3 days followed by a vitamin supplement in the water.
Treats scabs with a dilute iodine solution.

Apply ointment to soften scabs. (Mix 2 tablespoons of sulfur powder with 1/2 cup Vaseline. Apply to affected areas daily until lesion is healed.)

Clean coop and run with the objective of removing hot debris from the premises.

3.Prevention:

Practice good bio-security to avoid introducing fowl pox to your birds from an infected flock on your clothes, equipment or shoes.
Quarantine new flock members properly.

Control mosquitoes if possible.
Day old chicks and unaffected adults can be vaccinated against Fowl Pox. The wing-stick method is easy to do and very affordable. Once chickens have been vaccinated, they have permanent immunity.

During an outbreak, to limit the spread of the virus, clean and sanitize waterers daily.

Following an outbreak, clean and sanitize chicken coop weekly for a month.

06/09/2021

Ready for RiR chicks reservation.pls
Pm my Fb Guanzon
Sept 15 releasing
Cp # 09456208935 globe
Smart 09297749218

Thank you guys🙏🙏🙏 for follow,like,and share..Happy Farming 🙂JK Guanzon Farm products
30/07/2021

Thank you guys🙏🙏🙏 for follow,like,and share..
Happy Farming 🙂

JK Guanzon Farm products

Happy farming🙂Nice to see you happy 🤣🐓🐓🐓🐓All ..7 different breeds
27/07/2021

Happy farming🙂
Nice to see you happy 🤣🐓🐓🐓🐓
All ..7 different breeds

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