I had a couple big rosemary and oregano survive in a planted aviary for a year or so (the birds didn't kill them, I just didn't water them aggressively enough during a harsh summer 😅, we even lost trees that year). Birds would bathe right at their base. When the roots got exposed I'd just dump a...
GodLovesU, that's not the worst picture I've seen—about my own experience actually. I really think your bird will be okay if you can soak/medicate (catesquire has the right idea!).
Quail don't just like a dust bath, they NEED one. It's a natural and necessary part of their grooming behavior. Removes oil, debris, pests—probably feels good too, to be real.
I have a dirt floor aviary with bark sprinkled overtop. The birds just dig little pits wherever they like and bath...
Really, really sounds like a density/environment issue tbh. Yeah, adding/moving birds shakes things up, but the harm is mitigated if they have enough space to flat-out run and enough low cover to duck away under.
I've been raising quail at low density for almost 8 years. Biggest takeaway for...
I haven't noticed feather color making a difference—I've had just about every common color mutation make and sit a clutch. But I've only seen maybe 20 hens go broody total (and I've had to break most of them. They lay infertile eggs, plus I can't afford to buy hatching eggs for each of them, not...
The numbers are in......4 hatched! One never made it out (pipped upside down AND hit a vessel), and the rest were mysteriously empty—just yolk and huge, saddle-shaped air cells. Never had that many fail to even start developing, kinda odd. I'll try a different breeder next time.
Moved mom...
About half of all the female Coturnix I've ever kept have sat a nest (before I took their eggs away), and that's only when I've let them build a clutch in the first place. But every hatch has been from a different breeder, so it can't be all down to genetics.
I'm inclined to think...
I have a bird who has always done this. She was born with a beak malformation—the "quick" was set too far back, and from the start she would do her little "back-up" during eating, loosening dirt for bathing, but especially drinking.
I've long suspected her beak is hyper-sensitive, as she only...
Thank you! So pleased. Every broody I've given eggs to has hatched a fourth to a third of their clutch. Often the non-hatchers are empty or early quitters. I do "eggtopsies" to figure out where things went wrong, and have found only two fully-developed chicks that failed to hatch.
But I think...
Wow, never even considered this as a possibility. And yeah, medicating an animal that lightweight with something that suits its biology AND doesn't break the bank is a challenge. Not quite sold on the ethics, but medically very interesting. I look forward to your write-up—thanks for sharing your...
It's happening!
Went out to check on her and this little critter ran right up to me:
Had to pop it back with Janey, wanted to wander right into danger.
Mama has 1-2 others drying off under her, one more zipping. Didn't want to spook her off the nest, but got a peek behind the curtain...
I'm running a little "eggsperiment," letting eggs build up to see where the hens prefer to lay. Three other hens have gone broody in the meanwhile since my girl Janey started sitting, and I've had to break all 3 (not enough partitions for that many protective mamas). But I noticed that the hens...
Got 14 celadon eggs under diligent broody mama Janey—now it's Day 17, and I can hear the shells being chipped open beneath her. She's been so good! Candled at Day 9, a few empties but didn't pull them out (learned hard way that taking eggs can break the broody even if the rest of the clutch is...
Hmm. I would stop watering them like that right away. You're more likely to make them aspirate force-watering them like that—aspiration is usually deadly since birds can't cough due to their respiratory anatomy.
I can tell you really want them to live and do well, but for now they (and you)...
Just a couple things I'm wondering about:
1. How have you determined that it's not drinking enough? Newborns can but often don't gorge—they still have a yolk to metabolize.
2. How do you know it's full of air and not whatever you're feeding it? Because if food had been entering its crop, it...
Isn't that just its crop? Especially if it came back after feeding. Air bubbles I've seen make the skin seem more translucent.
Also why are you droppering the little thing to the point it's soaked? Even day-old chicks should be able to drink and eat on their own.
Huh. "Popped" implies an opening in the skin—if you have anything like betadine, you might try diluting it and gently flushing the area.
I'm just concerned about whatever caused there to be an air bubble in the first place—that's not normal. I've seen uninformed people accidentally puncture...
Can you post pictures?
While there could be air leaking under the skin if an air sac was punctured, there's a lot of important anatomy in that area. It'll help people help you better if we can see what you see.
Stall pellets/bedding pellets (compressed wood shavings and saw dust) might be what you're looking for. They gradually loosen into wood dust as they absorb water. I use them when I have to take a bird or two indoors for "hospital," and have also brooded chicks on it in the past.
Dries poop...