It definitely makes things difficult. But we’ll work around it.
I do use straw and hay in nesting boxes. From my experience, chopped straw doesn’t matt up nearly as much and is softer. But the chickens loved dust bathing in it, so it was everywhere.
We are going to get sand and use the gravel elsewhere. And a side note, it’s not a traditional coop. It’s a metal shed we repurposed into a shelter for all the birds. So weight isn’t an issue, cleanliness and the birds health is.
We are going to use it to fill in muddy parts of the yard.
We decided to switch because our local store stopped selling the shavings we use and several people in my family are allergic to different kinds of wood. We could only use this one brand.
We already switched one coop, and they did great.
So we are switching our bedding in the coop from shavings to sand. My mother ordered the sand, but she accidentally ordered multi-purpose gravel.
Instead of taking back the $100+ worth of gravel, would it be safe to use as a bedding? Or is it too coarse/big.
The chick is very active today and the wound doesn’t look as swollen or red. I sadly don’t think the skin flap is salvageable, as it scabbed up and I can’t get it to move over the wound anymore. I’m still applying medicine under it though.
Alright thank you! I have it inside under a heat lamp and am keeping the wound clean. The chick acts perfectly fine and is extremely active, and the skull itself looks okay. Just the skin. I’ve been spraying with vetericyn and using Neosporin(no pain killer).
Recently my seramas started hatching out a bunch of chicks, but all the hens decided they should be the mothers. So occasionally there may be a little scuffle every now and then, but nothing more than a few pecks.
I noticed one of the newest chicks(1-2 days old) was scalped. I think it got in...
Thats what I thought. But I’ve tried moving her when she starts stretching but she only wants in that one spot. And she actively tries to sit on me anytime I’m sitting around her.
I have a 3ish(not sure) month old Polish hen who keeps stretching her neck out with her mouth wide open. She will do it several times in a row, and for however long I’m holding her.
It isn’t related to her breathing from the looks of it, she isn’t gasping and she sounds fine with a stethoscope...