Poor baby.. she must be miserable... You could try giving her a bath, drying her, then reapplying the Sevin...but I'll be the Sevin will help shortly.
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Leghorns are great egg laying chickens. They are friendly to other Leghorns and can easily fly. The only problems is that they are bad in the pecking order and they can make a mess of the yard....
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I will start by saying that I love Australorps. In fact, my very favorite hen is an Australorp. She is such a sweet chicken and just let's you walk right up to her to pick her up. She doesn't run...
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I couldn't get this thing to stop leaking. I even tested it by putting it on a flat concrete surface and it still leaked out the entire 2 gallons. Tried hanging it, tried sitting it on the...
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seem like a good breed, if i had the room i would probably raise a batch of them they seem like they would be a good 4h starter show bird...considering i dont see many of this breed in my class...
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its a feed scooper it cant be perfect but over all when every thing is said an done i love mine its great its starting to show a little wear an tear but its to be expected i have had it for 4...
Weird behavior, never seen or heard of this before. *UPDATE 4: Poisen Plant* - Page 2
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You could try spraying her with Adams Flea and Tick spray for dogs and cats. It's so gentle that it can be used on kittens. It contains pyrethrins, which are powerful, but short-acting so there's no residue. I routinely spray the nesting boxes with it when I clean the coop, plus I wait until nightfall and everyone is roosting and give them all a spritz on their backs. It is easy to apply.
"Where are we going, and why are we in this handbasket?"
"Where are we going, and why are we in this handbasket?"
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Brilliant Feathers Urban Farming, LLC
See my listing in the buy-sell-trade section for current availabilities!
Brilliant Feathers Urban Farming, LLC
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- Location: Colorado Springs
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The mites were gone by the time the vet looked at her but she was still doing that weird head rub thing. They don't know what it is but we are going to give her an overnight stay to try and get her over this. If she doesnt make progress by the second forced feeding/watering they will put her down. It's nice to have an affordable avian vet in town.
So, back to the big question, what is causing this?
-head rubbing
-massive weight loss
-pulled out feathers
Add: The vet said the mites had nothing to do with what was going on. Thinks it may be either neurological or an imbalance from not eating. Though how she got to not eating in the first place...?
Edited by Chick_In_The_Burbs - 4/18/12 at 3:24pm
Brilliant Feathers Urban Farming, LLC
See my listing in the buy-sell-trade section for current availabilities!
Brilliant Feathers Urban Farming, LLC
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Cross you fingers that antibiotics, anti inflamitories and food work.
Brilliant Feathers Urban Farming, LLC
See my listing in the buy-sell-trade section for current availabilities!
Brilliant Feathers Urban Farming, LLC
See my listing in the buy-sell-trade section for current availabilities!
- Location: Wisconsin...... 2 chicken yrs old
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I believe you can cure her of her symptoms. Unfortunately.... If it is Marek's she will be a carrier for life and so will you.
This is a recent thread...please consider reading.
Bio-Security is needed.
I was trying to incubate my eggs to sell the chicks this year. My first set of eggs died after piping, I only hatched one girl. I opened each egg to find out what happened so I could correct this problem. After this first chick survived we had several chicken owners at our farm picking out hens from one coop. After they collected a couple of hens, they came into my hatching room where my one lonely chick was kept so I could write up the paper work and show them the NPIP certification. The whole time this is going on my two week old chick was riding on my shoulder. I spent most of my day with her with me since she hatched. If she wasn't with me she would drive everyone nuts crying for me.
I was out of chickens to sell, but my second batch hatched a week later.
My baby chick was now four weeks old and thought she was mom to the new chicks. She taught each of them how to eat, scratch, drink and kept them warm at night. Every morning when I opened the lid she would jump on my lap. That's when she sneezed on me
, about two weeks after buyers had been in the coops and some had held her. I didn't think anything of it that day. The next day, when I got home I opened the lid to see my baby girl. The other chicks now a week old in the brooder were sneezing too. No other problems, just a simple sneeze.![]()
I called the vet who got me in right away! They did a stool sample which came back negative and a blood test. He told me the white blood cells are slightly elevated and I had Mycoplasma. He gave me Tylan to treat everyone with. I looked up the disease and freaked.
After killing all my eggs in the bator and all my chicks
I got on here and read a story of a woman who had the same problem. I don't remember who it was or where I found her story but I cried as she asked someone to come out and cull her birds. I cried for her, I cried because of all the people telling her not to cull them,
to just treat them. We still have 8 birds to cull, and one more coop to bleach. I don’t want to pass this along to other chicken owners when I go out to buy feed or go groceries shopping. The disease can be spread on my clothing or hair, so I have been taking care of the remaining 8 to cull at night only, before going to bed.
I didn't know I had it, none of my other chickens showed signs of it (and still don't), just those chicks. They didn't even show signs when I stressed them out by chasing, chatching and culling half the flock. I didn't know that the people who were coming into the coop could be carriers. I didn’t know that my adults could be the carriers and not show any symptoms. My adults have not been tested for it yet, but will be culled.
I am going to start over. I have eggs on order. When those eggs hatch I have to wait two weeks then swab them and send the swabs to MSU. If they pass the Mycoplasma and NPIP testing then I would like to vaccinate them just like I vaccinate my dogs. I have contacted the company who makes the vaccine, but the only way they sell it is in quantities of 10. Each one would treat 2,000 birds and must be used as soon as I mix it. Each of the vials is around $60 which to me is worth it since each of those adult birds were $20, then $91 for NPIP testing, and I paid around $140 to be told the sneezing was a disease. After paying for that vet bill I discovered I could have swabbed my flock and sent the swabs to our vet school (MSU) and saved quite a bit of money.
After losing all my chickens to a disease, I discover it is easily spread by people, other chickens, wild birds and passed through the eggs. Most chicken owners don’t even know they have this disease, because the chicken only shows signs when it’s stressed. My only symptom was a couple of sneezes from week old chicks!
The hardest part about this disease and most chicken diseases is that a lot of people treat the chickens with antibiotics. When they no longer show any symptoms the flock owner keeps showing, selling and trading from the diseased flock, infecting others.
Sometimes being a responsible pet owner is the hardest thing to do.
Edited by Wickischickies - 4/12/12 at 10:21am
Got Mites? Go organic and use potassium sorbate like you find at the wine shop about a tablespoon to a gallon of warm water including a tablespoon of citric acid (preservative) both under $10 and mix a little yeast in the soup (mix well) and let bird sit for a few minutes in the solution and saturate the whole bird. You may have to adjust the amounts. I saw this on a poultry website.
Vintner
- seminolewind
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- Flock Mistress
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Can mycoplasma be carried from hen to egg?
- Weird behavior, never seen or heard of this before. *UPDATE 4: Poisen Plant*
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