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How To Make a Natural Herbal Dewormer

By Annie

This all natural herbal dewormer will help keep all your animals and livestock healthier.

It’s great raising livestock…if they are healthy! If you raise cattle for sale and have the grass for them to eat, you can make money while also filling your own freezer with healthy meat. 

Beginning to raise our own meat was something we started doing the year after we moved here. It was an important part of our getting started homesteading.

Natural dewormer ingredients ready for mixing.
You can make your own natural herbal dewormer.

How to Make a Natural Herbal Dewormer

And if you can raise your own goats, meat chickens or sheep, you can provide all the meat you could need for your family. And it’s fairly easy to do – you just have to put in the time. This is when they are healthy!

The problems with raising animals comes when they are NOT healthy. Things happen; animals get sick if something affects their immunity, or maybe they eat something they should not have. Then it can be a costly and sometimes, heartbreaking difficulty.

a cow eating hay in a snowy field
Keep your animals safe and healthy with this all-natural deworming mixture!

It’s important to try to always keep your animals as healthy as possible and to support their immune system in any way possible. An inexpensive supplement that should be a regular part of livestock raising is this recipe for deworming cattle, horses, dogs, goats, sheep, pigs and other animals.

Natural remedies like this one are fairly inexpensive and can save you lots of stress and prevent more health problems down the road! We love finding cheap easy natural ways to help us on our farm, like this oh so easy way to kill hornets and wasps.

Why you Need to Deworm your Farm Animals

Livestock can be affected by worms and other parasites just by grazing on pasture. They can also get worms by drinking water or eating food that has been contaminated with manure. No matter how clean you keep your animal feeders, worms are always a possibility.

a chicken outside
With correct dosage, this herbal dewormer can be used for a wide variety of animals.

If you have livestock, internal worms can easily become a problem. They can cause your animal to have weight loss, low energy, vomiting and other difficulties.

You will want to deworm all of your livestock every spring and summer. You will see the schedule below – follow this as just another part of the regular maintenance for your animals.

Small weaner pigs in the barn
Prevent worms from causing harm to your livestock using this easy homemade solution.

Whether you have chickens, pigs, goats or other livestock you want them to enjoy good health for the time they are with you. You can also use this natural dewormer for cats and dogs.

Here’s how to make a herbal dewormer – it will be cheaper than store bought. It definitely doesn’t have any chemicals in it, which is exactly what we want!

Small goats on a log in the forest.
Worm infestation can be dealt with using a natural remedy thanks to this herbal wormer!

 

You should be able to find most or all of the ingredients at your grocery store or your natural health store.

How to Make a Natural Dewormer

Mix in equal parts by measurement (not by weight):

  • fennel seed
  • dehydrated garlic
  • oregano
  • thyme
  • sage
  • pumpkin seed
  • hyssop
  • red clover

Mix well and keep any extra dewormer in a sealed container. This is a proprietary blend that should be able to clear the digestive tract or stomach of lots of different types of worms and other related illnesses. The combination of ingredients should have soothing properties thanks to the mixture of natural flavors.

Some other ingredients that can be helpful for deworming include quassia, psyllium, fennel, cloves, the hull of black walnut, anise, gentian, and wormwood.

Note: The amount given depends on the type of livestock AND the age.

Amounts below are for full grown animals – reduce the feeding allotment for younger livestock.

A baby goat follows his mom outside a house.
This herbal dewormer is a fantastic way to cure any livestock of various intestinal issues, which can be especially detrimental to pregnant animals.

Natural Herbal Dewormer Dose For Goats

Mix 1 tablespoon of the herb blend with one tablespoon of diatomaceous earth and then mix this into the daily ration of grain.

laying hens on a bed of hay
While this dewormer is a great substitute for medicine, which can be expensive, it may also be necessary to check in with a veterinarian if you find it doesn’t work as well as you’d like it to.

Dewormer Dose For Chickens

For 30 birds, add one cup of de-wormer to their daily grain ration.

When to Feed Herbal Dewormer

Add this natural dewormer to the feed rations for the first week of every month during Spring and Summer. Put this natural herbal dewormer on your schedule!

Making sure that you deworm all of your animals regularly is another step in maintaining their health. Healthy animals are happy animals and we want healthy animals to harvest, just like we want healthy food for eating. 

Some dewormers call for more frequent use, but especially if you’re raising animals for milk or for meat, this can cause issues with withdrawal time. Because all of the ingredients in this herbal dewormer are all natural, you shouldn’t have that issue!

Disclaimer: If you do add certain ingredients–like wormwood for example–keep an eye on your animals and don’t over-feed them the dewormer. Too much of certain ingredients can cause damage to the kidneys, liver, or nervous system.

We raise all of our own chickens – find out how to raise all the chicken a family needs for the year.

cows eating grass in a field
Inexpensive and easy to make, this dewormer made with herbs is a great way to keep your animals happy and healthy!

 

Filed Under: How To Tagged With: How To:

How To Start a Homestead

By Annie

Have you been used to buying your groceries at the supermarkets? Never raised animals or had a garden?

Are you  trying to figure out how to get started on the path to providing for your family? Have you thought about starting a homestead?

It can certainly feel overwhelming just to get started. So think about getting started, but doing it on a small level.

Trying to do too much too quickly can be a recipe for burnout and frustration.

Here’s what we did when we first move here in 2006. Learn from our mistakes and keep an open mind. And have fun – never forget to have fun!

 

sel sufficiency, homesteading, country

 

How to Set up a Homestead

 

Starting small will not only get you on the path to providing for your family, but it will teach you a lot. As your confidence grows and time goes by, you can implement another activity on your homestead (or in your backyard).

Let’s start with a garden.

 

Planting a Garden

 

 

 

What kind of vegetable seems to on your family’s plates the most often? That’s a good one to plant this year.

For us it is potatoes. So, it’s important for us to be sure to grow lots of potatoes this year.

The bonus with potatoes is you can feed them off to animals, once you are sure you have enough to store for winter eating for your family.

Other veggies we eat a lot of include green beans (so 2 double rows get planted), beets (3 or 4 rows) peas (so plant these up the fence that runs around the garden perimeter.

 

 

If you don’t have much experience with veggie gardening, it will take a few years before you can closely figure out how much to plant, in order to put enough by so there is food for your family over the winter.

Just get a start this year, and this fall you can count up your jars of canned beans, then figure out if you need to grow more next year.

Take a look at our 5 Easiest Vegetables to Grow and just start small!

Keep notes and start a garden journal to record this kind of information.

Next year, when it comes to ordering seed, you’ll have a good idea of how much seed you will need.

 

Raising Chickens

Looking to add animals into the mix? As far as I am concerned, #1 are chickens. Wonderful, you just feed them and water them – every day (almost) they will pay you back. We started with 4 hens, the next year we were up to 15.

EVERY time you have an extra dozen, (after you have put a couple dozen away for your family) sell the eggs. Keep the egg money in a separate jar. Once you get an egg customer, call them each week and see if they are in need of another dozen.

Pay for your chicken feed OUT of the jar. Find another customer (or as it often seems to happen, your one customer will find you the next one)….rinse and repeat.

 

 

 

Over time, you will have enough money in your jar to pay for their feed and still more money in the jar.

Got an extra $15 in there? Next time you are at the feed store, pick up a couple of T-posts or pick up a roll of chicken wire.

I am a big fan of T-posts and chicken wire. Temporary fencing can be set up wherever you need it and for however long you need it.

Put the chickens in there in the afternoon, and let them find their own food of bugs and grass.

Don’t let them scratch right down to the ground. Before that happens, pull out the T-posts and set your fencing up somewhere else that needs a good grazing.

Setting up fencing against existing buildings or fence posts reduces the number of T-posts you need.

Chickens like to work! Bored chickens get unhealthy and start picking on each other, just to give themselves something to do.

Harness that energy and put it into something that will help you. Chickens allowed to free range and graze will lower the feed bill, and that’s what you want.

Meanwhile, your family is enjoying the eggs, extras can be sold, and the money saved up for feed and the “next thing on the farm list”.

 

raising chickens, hens, layers

 

 

If you have access to fresh manure, set up temporary fencing around the manure pile, and let the girls in.

Within days they will have eaten all the small seeds they find and any bits of leftover grain.

They’ll also scratch and fluff up that manure pile for you. Let Them do the work! Then move the fencing.

Once the manure has sat for a month or two, you can wheel it over to use on your veggie garden.

 

Raising Chicks for Meat

Meanwhile, you’re saving your egg money in the jar. Over time, say you end up with an extra $50 in there (after the feed, that you are now able to buy in either bulk or buy multiple bags so you have them on hand).

An extra $50 will buy you some meat birds (in season of course). Here in BC, $50 will probably get you 20 birds, by the time you take shipping into consideration.

 

 

 

How many meat birds can your family eat? Averaging about say 5.5 lbs, 20 chickens will enable your family to have chicken every 2 1/2 weeks or so.

It’s possible to get 4 meals off a chicken (including the soup at the end). See how all this is adding up over time?

 

 

 

 

Yes, the first year you will have to put out money for meat bird feed, however, time it right for your season.

Raise the birds when you hardly have to supplement their heat after the first 2 weeks.

During the spring, summer and fall, if you let your laying hens free range of graze in temporary coops, you won’t be spending as much money on their feed.

Use the money instead to buy feed for the meat birds (20% protein). Keep selling eggs – rinse and repeat.

Another easy way to offset your laying hen’s feed bill (while collecting their eggs) is to feed them veggies and greens from the garden during the growing season.

You can feed greens to meat birds too, but you’ll always have to buy them their special feed.

Meat birds are bred to gain weight FAST, and they just won’t do it living off of garden greens.

Read how we manage to raise 8 pound meat birds in just 8 weeks.

Eight weeks later, butcher your meat birds. Still have your one or two egg customers?

Do yourself a favour (and them) and give them one bird, all dressed out. Thank them for buying your eggs and hand over a chicken.

Let them know you’re going to do meat birds the following year. If they should want some, they can order some.

In addition, you’ve just been given a LOT of fantastic manure from those meat birds.

Let it compost, then add it to your veggie gardens – rinse and repeat.

 

 

 

 

Meanwhile, you’re making sure you spend any egg money on feed. If you have leftover money, keep buying T-posts or wire or veggie seeds.

Every time, put the money BACK into either your garden or your animal needs.

You will see, over time that you can add slowly to your homesteading – every little bit helps.

Concentrate first on what your family needs are, sell any excess.

 

 

 

Keeping Goats for Milk

Does your family drink a lot of milk? Think about saving towards a goat. You can supply milk and cheese for your family.

Goats like to eat brush and scrub, so if you have areas like this that you want to clear off for future pasture or gardens, put the goats in there.

You’ll need stronger fencing tho than T-posts, you know what they say about goats!

If you have small trees that need to be spaced, you can cut the trees down and use them for fence rails.

You can also take the branches off and use them for bean or pea supports in your veggie garden.

The idea is to spend as little as possible in the beginning. Over time, keep plowing your monies back into your barnyard and gardens.

Feed ANY weeds you pull to your laying hens. When you finish harvesting parts of your veggie garden, move the T-posts in to section off part of the garden, then put some hens in there.

They’ll work your soil, eat the bugs, and add manure all at the same time. Better for you that They do the work.

When you cut the grass, give the clippings to both the laying hens and the meat birds.

If you have excess, start putting it down between the veggie garden rows to keep the weeds down. It will also add to improving your garden soil.

 

 

 

 

One more thought – for goodness sake, don’t underprice your eggs!

That is the Worst thing you can do – any customers that are wanting to buy farm fresh eggs or veggies are willing to pay at Least what the supermarket charges.

It should be more, because of your attention to growing as naturally as possible. People are willing to pay a premium for this.

Don’t overcharge, but jeez, don’t undercharge. That’s totally shooting yourself in the foot, plus you are messing up any other farmer’s plans to try to recoup their original costs.

Note I’m not including hay in the above, the way we work here, we do not overwinter any animals except for laying hens.

We may get a beef cow in the future, once we start rejuvenating our pastures and putting aside our own hay to feed them over winter.

You’ll need to have some hay or straw or something on hand for on the floor of your chicken coop.

No reason you can’t grow the grass long, then cut it down and use that.

Or straw, leaves or anything else you can think of that is no cost. Your hens will not mind!

 

 

 

 

Begin to think of your farm or backyard as a cycle. Everything has a season and as much as possible needs to be returned to the land to increase soil fertility.

Put things in (cover crops, green manure, composted manure) and take things out (the meat, eggs, vegetables).

 

chickens, pigs, goats and a garden in the country

 

Focus on improving your soil and the health of your family as cheaply as possible.

I’m willing to wager that in the next couple of years, you will be eating a LOT healthier for a lot less money.

Start small, but get started! You can do it!

Your family will eat healthier, eat fresher, you’ll save money and hopefully in a year or two, all your animals will be self-sustaining.

Think about how you can get started on the path to providing for your family.

Filed Under: How To, How to Get Started, Raising Chickens, Raising Meat Birds, Raising Pigs Tagged With: chickens, chicks, Grow Vegetables, hens, How To:, laying hens, Potatoes, Raising Meat Birds, self sufficiency

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