Thanks! That helps. If another dies, I'll do my best to make the 90-minute drive to the nearest lab. I'm not sure I could do a necropsy; I've only processed one bird, and that was years and years ago. I'd want a tutor. XD
I'm holding my eggs back until I can talk to the lab. I'm afraid it's flu...
Oh dear. I hadn't thought of that! I'll get them 16% next time.
Is it a good idea to go ahead and treat the whole flock with either penicillin or cephalexin? Would I need a vet to prescribe it?
I updated the post; they only sleep and nest in the coop. They're in the run all day every day. I let them out by 7:00 and don't close them up until after they've put themselves to bed.
The closest lab is 90 minutes away. Which isn't bad, but my life doesn't allow me to randomly make that trip...
...in the towel at the moment.
1) 5yo Black Australorp rooster; 9yo Buff Orpington hen; 2-5yo Black Australorp hen; two 2yo Golden Comets
2 & 3) *Rooster just slowed down gradually; got less feisty, lost feathers, stopped eating, and eventually just died in July. He felt a normal weight...
Resurrecting this thread. I have the same issue with the impending freezing weather here in Georgia. I'm not finding solar-powered heaters (without a multi-part, expensive setup). Would wrapping the waterers in black poly help at all? Or not so much?
Otherwise, I'm stuck lugging hot water from...
My solar market lights end up being on 2 hours after sunset because we're often out. So far, all hens are on their roosts when I go to count heads and turn off the light. I do wake up to turn it on; it has a remote that works from the back door, though. But you're right; it's hard for me to go...
Well I bought solar-powered market lights that have a remote. And I'll just have to wake up in the middle of the night to turn them on. All the timer setups look too complicated for me. I know next to nothing about wiring things together. I'll put that on my list of useful skills to learn. 👍
I'm at my wit's end. Nothing I do seems to make a difference. Organic ACV in their water, nutridrench, jalapenos, 22% feed, 16% feed, more feed pans, 11 gallons of water, greens, grit. Always oyster shells.
We got two new hens in July, and my daughter suggested separating them into our mini...
Mine didn't lay July-September nor November-December. July was a hard summer molt. I don't know why they laid in October and then quit. Change in season? They're costing me a lot in feed.
She sounds better and has gained a little weight, but isn't fully back up to where she needs to be. The thing is, she's in tight quarters. Is it worth putting her back in with the flock and letting her recover the rest of the way there so she can get some exercise?