Malnourished chicks!! One DEAD, help!

Oct 3, 2020
68
120
86
Bethel, NY
I am new to BYC and dont know if my last post was in the right place, sorry if you are seeing this twice.

I will preface by saying that I am really screwed up... I start with the story of what happened and end with my plead for help.

We purchased two three week old splash silkie chicks to add to our flock of juvenile silkies from a wonderful small local hatchery. They supplied us with what we thought was chicken starter when we told them we were out... my boyfriend was the one who picked up the chicks and apparently told them very explicitly that we were out of chicken starter and needed some for the night.

Well, I assume the guy at the hatchery said "I have chicken grit I can give you," without clearly stating that he didn't have spare food... and my boyfriend assumed grit was a type of chicken food (it certainly sounds like it). The guy gave us what we thought was a week worth of chicken feed (it was A LOT of grit). Clearly it was just a terrible miscommunication... and in our defense this chicken grit looks EXACTLY like our starter feed. So I gave the chicks what I thought was starter feed (but was chicken grit), along with water with added electrolytes, B12, amino acids, vitamins and sugar. They immediately gussled down an entire mason jar of water and ate a LOT of the chicken grit.

We brought them home 5 days ago now... and I noticed last night they were becoming increasingly more lethargic, but they are chicks and its normal for them to be sleepy and cuddly, there was no sign of distress and until today they were very active and chick-like. Well today, my boyfriend went into the brooder room around 2pm and noticed one with its limbs splayed out. He picked it up and it was practically limp, it then rolled over and started convulsing. We checked its throat to see if it was choking but it wasn't... it didn't look good.

I immediately called the guy from the hatchery and explained what was going on. He thought it was likely dying of natural chick causes, but after 10 minutes on the phone going over every possible error I could have made I realized that he never gave me FOOD! We realized the miscommunication!! He said, "no, I gave you grit... you've been feeding them chicken starter right?" and the mystery was solved...

We immediately gave her syringes of sugar water with electrolytes, probiotic plain greek yogurt, and vitamins and she was seemingly coming back to life after about 30 minutes of care. She even stood up and starting chirping again! The other chick was so concerned, it went over to her to help and snuggled up to her :( ... her condition quickly deteriorated after about an hour of intensive care and she died in my hands.

I feel just so so terrible, clearly the poor thing died of malnutrition :( I don't know how this miscommunication transpired... it really makes me question the actual conversation that took place over the issue of us needing food... but we are new chicken owners and just didn't know what grit was. How these three week old chicks survived without food for 5 day is beyond me!! It must have been the fortified sugar water??

Now onto the issue of the surviving chick -- she has been eating and drinking NONSTOP for 5 hours now!! I worry about her getting sick consuming this much food and water at once on an empty stomach. I mixed the starter feed, water, electrolytes and vitamins into a large shallow dish so that the food would be easier to digest and also to make sure she was getting as much nutrition as possible. She seems to be doing miraculously well, chirping, running around and like I said, gorging herself!!

I noticed her crop is now VERY enlarged, which makes sense.. Its not hard at all, its very soft and squishy, but I worry about what this means and am wondering what I should do?? It does seem unhealthy for a chick who has been starved to eat and drink so much continuously. Do I take the food and water away for her from a bit? Is it normal for the crop to become enlarged? Help!!

She also has not laid down to rest at all in five hours, I am sure she is just in shock, but she's walking around endlessly chirping, pecking and eating. I just really want to make sure she is okay!! Any advice would be tremendously helpful, I dont want to lose her too! She has already fought so hard.

She is definitely very very sad to have lost her other half :( the two were attached at the hip and I just feel beyond guilty. She starts actually screaming when I leave her even for a minute! We are going to pick up two more silkies from the same hatchery tomorrow that were same batch as her so she's not all alone...

Thanks in advance!!
 
Wow, I'm so sorry about what happened. it seems that whatever you're doing right now seems to be working, so I would continue that. I'm pretty much a new chicken mom myself, so I hope someone else will come along with some good advice. for now, you can give your lonely baby a small mirror so she thinks there's another chick in the brooder with her.
 
You put the other thread in "emergencies/diseases/cures" and this one is in "raising baby chicks" you put the first one in the right place but this one is fine too. Good luck with your chick, rooting for you and your chick!
 
I personally would pull the food and water for the night. Let her digest what she ate already. Check her crop in the morning, before you give the food and water back. If the crop went down overnight, go ahead and give free choice food and water again, see how she does. If her crop is still huge, then thats another problem with different solutions.
 
If any animal regardless of species is starved you have to introduce food slowly otherwise it will shock their system in large quantities and in many cases kill them.
 
X2 on checking the crop in the morning to make sure it's empty. As far as her being lonely, can you get another silkie, around the same age? Chickens don't do well by themselves. I have heard of using a small stuffed animal, or a mirror, like the above poster mentioned. I've never tried it, but it's worth a shot. Good luck to your little one. Keep us updated.
 
is she in a brooder with a bright white light for heat?

That can mess with their brains because they don't get any night or day differences, so carry on eating and drinking all night when they should be sleeping in the dark.

I would remove the food and water for a few hours until its crop goes down a bit, and give it a soft toy to cuddle up to and sleep. Then put the food/water back in later.
 
Give it some warmth, since it is a necessity for new chicks. Since her friend isnt there to provide her heat, you can keep a warm water bottle and a stuffed toy next to her to get sufficient heat from. When the new batch arrives, make sure that they dont peck at the crop. Take away food for some time, but continue providing her the vitamins for nutrition and proper growth. Go slow with the food right now.
 
Yeah there is a lot of new words to be learned before getting chicks.
I actually bought the Dummies Chicken Raising book before getting chicks.
I hope all goes well for you from now on.
 

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