Tylan is a good drug to treat respiratory illness but not much else. That vet may be useless when it comes to chickens. But it would be worth trying to get the vet to simply write you a script for Ciprofloxacin. That's a heavy-hitter drug to treat E.coli.
We can't really know why a hen gets...
Do you have curtains on the nest boxes for privacy? Usually, it won't matter if there is other activity in the coop as long as a hen can settle comfortably in a nest behind a curtain.
Sounds like she is developing a chronic reproductive infection. Can you find a vet to prescribe a strong antibiotic to treat e.coli? Or do you have any antibiotic on hand? It may be early enough in the infection to successfully treat.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/how-to-treat-sour-crop-and-impacted-crop-and-how-to-know-which-one-youre-dealing-with.73607/ Read this if you already haven't. There are other causes of sour crop such as the crop hanging (pendulous) too low for it to empty normally overnight. This could...
Chickens don't usually hang around inside their coop. We normally feed them in the run so they have food handy where they spend most of their time. If they free range, not spending any time in their run, then they are finding plenty to eat in the woods.
And no, it's not a good idea to serve...
Is she laying? If not, that poop may indicate a reproductive infection starting up. Continue to keep and eye on the poop, and if it gets more watery and the mucous turns unmistakably yellow, and if she has swelling between her legs and just under her vent, you may need to get her on an antibiotic.
The crate came like that. The solid "cap" you see on top of the crate in this photo actually is designed to be inserted in a space below the mesh floor to catch the poop. This tray is removed from the floor of the crate so that air can freely circulate under the open mesh bottom.
I got this...
The antibiotics only treat the secondary infection caused by the virus. The virus is carried by each member of the flock in their cells as it's so contagious that any new chicken will immediately be exposed and infected. So, all chickens in this flock will have already been exposed and isolating...
Respiratory viruses, once in a flock, never leave. Stress, from possible external parasites for example, can trigger the respiratory virus and the chickens in the flock will begin showing symptoms again. These symptoms are usually treated with an antibiotic such as what the vet prescribed for...
At just four months, like a fourteen year old boy, he's all hormones and no sense. I admit to not being an expert on ducks, but sexual precociousness happens with cockerels as well. It does become necessary to keep the immature bird separate from the girls until he grows into his hormones.
Have...
Any probiotics will work. I use the tablets you can buy in the digestive aids in the pharmacy section of the store. I just pop a tablet into the beak each day.
Your chicken has indiscriminate tastes. You need to have a talk with her.
While rat turds are rich in various kinds of bacteria and viruses, the tiny amount the hen ingested likely will not be enough to make her sick. But that does depend on her having a healthy immune system.
You should keep...
My first reaction seeing the photos was that they looked like multiple feather cysts. To find out, take a sterilized razor blade or an Xacto knife and make a tiny, shallow cut in the middle of one of them. If these are feather cysts, an ingrown feather will pop out, looking like a tiny curved...
I'm sorry, I can't deliver to you good news. You are lucky to have a vet that would see your chicken and prescribe meds, but while the vet recognized that she has a reproductive infection, they likely don't realize that once the lash material begins to show up in large amounts, the infection has...
This tells me she's likely dealing with an oviduct obstruction. It may be a shelless egg stuck in the shell gland or, worst case, a tumor in her oviduct. It doesn't bode well that this hasn't resolved yet.
I'm going to advise you to run down to Walmart and get a bottle of this kind of calcium...
I do not advise anyone to poke around inside a hen's cloaca. If an egg is stuck there, you can feel it from the outside of the vent. But most of the time, the egg will get stuck farther up the oviduct where it cannot be felt. There is always a risk of shoving bacteria from poop residue up the...
We usually give the calcium in one dose. But it won't hurt to break up the doses. DE is not an insecticide. Use permethrin.
Chickens do not usually have their forst adult molt until the fall of their second year. So, her distress is likely from the bugs on her and possible binding.
Are you flushing the eye at least once a day in addition to the Terramycin? You need to try to rinse away any accumulated pus or discharge. Treating the eye itself for a fungal infection is tricky. If you are sure there's a fungus in the eye, then Terramycin isn't advisable as it can work...