Isn't 5 cc's equal to one teaspoon? That would make the 2 cc's somewhere between 1/4 tsp and 1/2 tsp. I know that the stuff works beautifully on poultry. Chickens have a problem with coccidiosis because the wild birds will re-infect your flock. It's one of those things that you treat for routinely, and don't wait to symptoms to occur. By the time you see unthrifty chickens, they're in serious trouble.
Corid or Amprol 128 would probably do just as well on dogs, but that is "off label" use. However, there are a lot of things that breeders use that are off label, but effective, so you have to make your own decision. For example, I use Ivermectin, Safe-Guard and Pyran-50. The Ivermectin is for horses, the Safe-Guard is for cattle and I think that the Pyran-50 is for humans (not sure about that). The Ivermectin is the same as Heartguard. The Safe-Guard is the same as Panacur (and made by the same people) and the Pyran-50 is the same as the Strongid-T de-wormer that I used to buy from my vet (and probably the way that he bought it as the liquid looks & smells the same and they would pour it into a plain bottle without letting me see the original bottle). If I can buy the same active ingredient, know the correct dosage and have substantial savings, then I'll use "off label" items. The money can be better spent of other things that my dogs need rather than lining my vet's pockets. Not that I mind paying him, but he is well paid as it is AND neither vet at the clinic will write a prescription for vet meds. All the best, Susan Cochran ----- Original Message ----- From: "Cathy J. Gish" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Monday, January 07, 2002 2:16 PM Subject: Re: [CKCS-L] Need help with FrontPage and Coccidia > OK I went and looked on my bag... This time the vet wrote 2 cc's per gallon of > water. > > Cathy > > Dave Van Winkle wrote: > > > Thanks so much Susan. I found her email with the recommended dosage of Corid > > or Ampro 128 and it was 1/2 teaspoon per gallon. I'd like to know if anyone > > else has used this and how they liked it. > > Cheryl Van Winkle > > Portrait Cavaliers > > > > > > The product that Cathy mentioned is Corid, but it is not available any > > > longer. "Amprol 128" is the same thing and you can get that from American > > > Livestock Supply Company (www.americanlivestock.com) for $12 for > > > a 10 oz bag > > > of powder. Both Corid and Amprol are the same strength and same active > > > ingredient. You'll have to ask Cathy for the dosage. I use it for poultry. > > > > > > All the best, > > > Susan Cochran > > > > > > > > > > ========================================================= > > "Magic Commands": > > to stop receiving mail for awhile, click here and send the email: > > mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?body=SET%20CKCS-L%20NOMAIL > > to start it up gain click here: > > mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?body=SET%20CKCS-L%20MAIL > > > > E-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] for assistance. > > Search the Archives... http://apple.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ckcs-l.html > > > > All e-mail sent through CKCS-L is Copyright 2002 by its original author. > > -- > http://www.FlyingColorsCavaliers.com > > ========================================================= > "Magic Commands": > to stop receiving mail for awhile, click here and send the email: > mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?body=SET%20CKCS-L%20NOMAIL > to start it up gain click here: > mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?body=SET%20CKCS-L%20MAIL > > E-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] for assistance. > Search the Archives... http://apple.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ckcs-l.html > > All e-mail sent through CKCS-L is Copyright 2002 by its original author. ========================================================= "Magic Commands": to stop receiving mail for awhile, click here and send the email: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?body=SET%20CKCS-L%20NOMAIL to start it up gain click here: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?body=SET%20CKCS-L%20MAIL E-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] for assistance. Search the Archives... http://apple.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ckcs-l.html All e-mail sent through CKCS-L is Copyright 2002 by its original author.
