Right, experience is the best teacher. Follow me and you'll learn more regarding chicken keeping. OR, you can read some of my previous postings. Hang on! Good luck CR.
Chickens shed dander and feather sheaths which is normal. Chickens can go into molt anytime of the year really. Some molts are barely noticible, others are full blown hard molts, most of which occur in the fall and winter. Generally, less daylight hours and cooler weather are triggers for molt...
Not if the wattles are released quickly, then the bird swallows on her own. If the individual continues to hold the wattles, then yes, aspiration is entirely possible.
I've wormed birds orally on death's door in this manner and have never lost a bird due to aspirating.
Your hens health will decline without some type of nutrients/hydration. If you cant get the Nutri Drench, at the very least try giving her sugar water via eyedropper or a syringe without a needle. A few drops at a time on the side of her the beak at a time, or gently pull her wattles down and...
You didnt mention if she was eating or drinking. If she's not eating or drinking, you can give her a couple drops of Poultry Nutri drench orally via eyedropper. Pull her wattles down and put one drop in her mouth and quickly release the wattles so she can swallow the liquid on her own.
Continue with comfort care for her and keep her warm like you're doing.
If you get the chance; boil some plain white rice and mix some buttermilk in it. Then give it to her to eat. Ensure the rice has cooled, the buttermilk should help cool it.
Tylan works great in conjunction with a sulfa drug against coryza.
Tylan alone works good against mycoplasma diseases, but not alone against coryza.
Are you absolutely certain you were dealing with coryza and not mycoplasma gallisepticum in your birds? Symptoms of both diseases are practically...
How was it determined that your birds have MS?
If in fact they have cocci and the corid isnt working, treat them with sulfadimethoxine or sulmet. You'll need a prescription from a vet for either of these products.
Just to let you know that if the sulfa drugs dont work, capillary worms can cause...
As far as the itchiness goes, inspect her for lice/mites if the vet didnt already do so.
I suspect she might getting ready to go into molt which irritates chickens.
It takes a long time for beaks to heal, it's a slow process. I suspect the marks are bruises and are part of the healing process. If not, I wouldnt worry about it.
Birds with beak injuries require special care and I recommend that you keep her separated from the others until her beak completely...
Twitchy Bee. You might want to consider purchasing sulfadimethoxine or sulmet to treat coryza if it pops up in your flock. It used to be that either could be bought over the counter, but now a prescription is required. It'll be cheaper than buying vaccines.
Just for your information; it's...
I agree with Eggcessive. Separate her to prevent further pecking. Apply neosporin until healed. Provide her food and water while she's caged and dont forget to clean the cage. Stop the ivermectin also. Ringworm is a fungus. It's possible for chickens to have ringworm, but rare.
I've done plenty of bumblefoot surgeries in my 38 years of raising chickens. There is no scab, nor infection that I can see on the footpad.
Since you are already giving him 2 different antibiotics with apparently no effect, I dont believe it's a staph infection which is caused by bumblefoot...
I'd be cautious about ammonia fumes with soiled bedding. I clean out my coops each morning no matter what the weather/temps. My birds huddle up with each other in freezing temps. One of them sleeps in a nest box.
My waterers only had thin ice this morning, easy to stir it up. Gonna be the same...
A few questions for you: Does she stand like a penguin? Is she lethargic? Does she look at her feed and just pick at it? Has she squawked at the other hens when they were all together especially when she was in a nest? Does she look or feel bloated, like a water balloon?
Thanks for taking the...