BackYard Chickens › BYC Forum › Raising BackYard Chickens › Emergencies / Diseases / Injuries and Cures › Can a molt really start to get bad this time of year?
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:

Can a molt really start to get bad this time of year?

post #1 of 5
Thread Starter 

I have a couple of chickens getting really naked on their backs. A couple of pictures are below. The barred rock started what appeared to be a molt on her tail early fall. Her tail feathers have not come back. The only newish fresh looking feathers are around her neck and head. The tail, which I thought was to recover first, hasn't. There are lots of feathers that look like they are thinning out really bad. The silver laced wyandotte has been losing feathers behind her tail for a couple months, and we can now see skin on her back. Both have continued laying throughout the winter. The BR's age is unknown. The SLW was hatched January 31 2011, and started laying in July last year.

 

I have other birds that were hatched the same date as the SLW, that have a few feathers missing behind the wings. This all started before my roo became mature and began mating, so while some of the feather loss can be attributed to that, not all can. So I guess, what I'm wondering is if molting can happen in the spring, or be peaking this time of year, or is it too late for this? Is there a "season" for molting, or can it happen any time, depending on the bird? There do not appear to be any lice or mites...Here are some pics....

 

103_1062.jpg

103_1065.jpg

103_1078.jpg

 

103_1075.jpg

103_1076.jpg

2 years ago, a flat-lander, in FL, hiding in the house due to 8 months of heat and humidity every year. Now, living in the Smoky Mountains, gardening, keeping chickens, and loving life. You CAN teach an old dog new tricks. I used to list here the breeds of chickens I owned. There is not enough room to do that anymore. I have lots of chickens....

Reply

2 years ago, a flat-lander, in FL, hiding in the house due to 8 months of heat and humidity every year. Now, living in the Smoky Mountains, gardening, keeping chickens, and loving life. You CAN teach an old dog new tricks. I used to list here the breeds of chickens I owned. There is not enough room to do that anymore. I have lots of chickens....

Reply
post #2 of 5

My first guess would be the rooster, simply because of the location of the feather loss. My second guess would be lice or mites. Even if you think they don't have lice or mites, I would dust of spray anyway to be sure. It can't hurt. I doubt they would be molting this time of year, unless the lighting management system they have been under has changed and messed up their clockwork. If they are on low protein feed, other hens may be pecking and eating the feathers to make up for their protein deficiency. Or the other hens may be bored and reverted to pecking for entertainment, but since yours appear to be outside I doubt that is the case. 

 

If you are sure it isn't the roo, I would bet on parasites. I thought I didn't have parasites, but it turned out I even had them in my 12 week old meat birds. If the edges of the feathers seem to be cut off in places, and possibly brittle, it is probably due to parasites chewing. 

For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son,
that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. - John 3:16
Reply
For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son,
that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. - John 3:16
Reply
post #3 of 5

In addition, molts are supposed to be orderly and timely, starting at the head and working backwards. If new feathers aren't readily or consistently replacing the old, It probably isn't a molt. 

 

However, your BR appears to have shiny, well colored, and full neck feathers, and the rest of her body is dull. This would make sense in the "working backwards" system of the molt, as it appears her neck feathers have already been replaced. On second thought, looks like the BR is molting. Go figure. 


Edited by TajMahalChickens - 4/10/12 at 6:26pm
For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son,
that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. - John 3:16
Reply
For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son,
that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. - John 3:16
Reply
post #4 of 5
Thread Starter 

So the BR looks like a definite molt. What's everyone think of the SLW?

2 years ago, a flat-lander, in FL, hiding in the house due to 8 months of heat and humidity every year. Now, living in the Smoky Mountains, gardening, keeping chickens, and loving life. You CAN teach an old dog new tricks. I used to list here the breeds of chickens I owned. There is not enough room to do that anymore. I have lots of chickens....

Reply

2 years ago, a flat-lander, in FL, hiding in the house due to 8 months of heat and humidity every year. Now, living in the Smoky Mountains, gardening, keeping chickens, and loving life. You CAN teach an old dog new tricks. I used to list here the breeds of chickens I owned. There is not enough room to do that anymore. I have lots of chickens....

Reply
post #5 of 5

I have 8 hens of various breeds. I live in southwest  Idaho....and I think my birds are going through a molt as well. They are free ranged, no parasites, one and two year old girls that had a regular molt last fall (when they were "supposed" to molt. Egg production was normal all winter. Now there are feathers all around their coop, in their coop, and in the yard where they range. Can hens molt twice a year?

New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:
  Return Home
BackYard Chickens › BYC Forum › Raising BackYard Chickens › Emergencies / Diseases / Injuries and Cures › Can a molt really start to get bad this time of year?