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  1. blondiebee181

    How to keep food off the ground and water clean?

    Getting their food on the ground is pretty "every day" for a chicken. They are used to foraging and scavenging for bugs and tasty greens in the dirt, under dead leaves...they're always scratching with their feet to unearth something new and tasty. Don't worry about them eating off the ground...
  2. blondiebee181

    My bumblefoot frequent flyer

    This is her foot today during bandage changing...still kinda puffy...did I not get enough?
  3. blondiebee181

    My bumblefoot frequent flyer

    Well, fingers crossed then I guess! *side note, Neosporins active ingredient is Bacitracin which should be just fine for dressing wounds in fowl.
  4. blondiebee181

    My bumblefoot frequent flyer

    This is Petrie. Petrie has had surgery before . My question is, I removed the icky scab mass from her foot, but it was bleeding pretty bad, so I couldn't see much else. I packed Neosporin onto a gauze pad and wrapped up her foot and called it good. Keeping her in the hospital box tonight, and...
  5. blondiebee181

    very sick chicken

    X2 on everything said here, I lost my precious hen Daisy last year to egg yolk peritonitis...she had had problems with internal laying before, recovered, and then struggled again....and the second time, we had her put to sleep, we knew it was time, her abdomen was swollen with the infection, and...
  6. blondiebee181

    very sick chicken

    Yeah maybe the respiratory infection...how much time does she spend indoors versus outside?
  7. blondiebee181

    "RRR" (Reduce, Re-use, Recycle) Let's hear it!!

    It's cert. organic seed.
  8. blondiebee181

    very sick chicken

    Runny nose or cough? Can she stand? When did she last eat or drink? What does her poo look like? How old? Is she laying? Certainly keep her isolated....getting her to drink I would say is item one...
  9. blondiebee181

    ENDED - WINNER ANNOUNCED - Official BYC Caption Contest - 02/06/2017 - Pic by RodNTN

    " Okay, Henrietta...YOU cross the road first...."
  10. blondiebee181

    "RRR" (Reduce, Re-use, Recycle) Let's hear it!!

    I had this cool idea last year to try making my old feed sacks into re-usable shopping bags, but not having a sewing machine kinda put a damper on that plan...I have a bunch of grass seed/old garden seeds laying around that I'm thinking of making sprouted fodder with next!
  11. blondiebee181

    "RRR" (Reduce, Re-use, Recycle) Let's hear it!!

    Hello BYC World! I want to hear how YOU are implementing "RRR" in your chicken keeping routines! Here are a couple of my most recent ideas: Now, in the past I've typically just thrown my shells onto the compost heap, but I've finally decided to save and crush them to either feed back or...
  12. blondiebee181

    Leghorn with issues, advice please.

    Yeah I am trying not to bring her in unless it's really cold but I want her to heal. Thanks guys.
  13. blondiebee181

    Leghorn with issues, advice please.

    Needless to say, she's going to be spending tonight (12F) in her box in the laundry room (40F) I wanna give her poor little comb a chance to heal.
  14. blondiebee181

    Leghorn with issues, advice please.

    Here's what it looks like today.
  15. blondiebee181

    Leghorn with issues, advice please.

    Yeah. I have been just using Neosporin...it doesn't appear to be getting worse...I will try to take a picture today, just been a hectic week and I haven't gotten around to it.
  16. blondiebee181

    Leghorn with issues, advice please.

    Comb update since it's warmed up...it's turned mostly opaque at the top and still scabbed. I can post a pic later. Anyone know their frostbite stages and can tell me if it'll heal or not?
  17. blondiebee181

    I am wondering when my 2 new bantams will start laying?

    Most chickens start laying at approximately 21-30 weeks of age but temps, light and breed have a lot of impact on this. So the two in the picture are 40 weeks? If so, fingers crossed any day now! The face of the top one is looking nice and red, are they squatting for you yet? How many hours of...
  18. blondiebee181

    Molting (in winter??) or being pecked at??

    A lot of people heat, totally your choice. I have had birds for several years now and have never used heat or light and they acclimate to the cold just like we do. For example, this spring when temps start pushing 45-50F it starts to feel great outside right? Such a relief from zero, teens, and...
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