pickledhill

In the Brooder
Jan 12, 2025
7
2
14
Story:
Our girl Bonita (Orpington): We made a huge mistake at the beginning by putting straw around the inside perimeter of their brooder. We quickly learned that it was too slick for their baby legs and at a few weeks old her and another chick were having a hard time walking. We took the straw out immediately and separated them from the rest of the full strength chicks to rehabilitate. The other one, Red, has crooked toes, but Bonita's leg issue isn't as obvious. They stayed separate from the rest of the flock for the remaining weeks in the brooder because they were getting bullied and were still weak. Neither were walking much. They're also much smaller than the others. But it's no surprise their growth was stunted if they're not moving much. I was hand feeding them vitamins daily. They're 11 weeks old now and all 11 are out in the coop together. Red (crooked toes) is walking around and has grown significantly. Bonita on the other hand stays squatting. She can get around if she needs to, but not recovering like we hoped. She can lift her legs quite straight to stand, but is very shaky when she walks. And then quickly goes back to a squatting position. We keep a close eye on her. Putting her near the water and food when we go in to feed. Everyday we have to physically pick her up and put her at the water bowl and you can tell she's dehydrated and not drinking on her own.

Question:
I initially thought she slipped on the straw and hurt a tendon and it never recovered, but it's certainly possible she has a vitamin deficiency? Or maybe something else. We really want her to make it, but it's sort of becoming a question of ethics. Do I keep her alive with the hope she makes it and a chance she dies naturally on her own? Or is it unethical to keep her alive if her quality of life relative to the rest of the chickens is significantly worse. Some days are better than others, but most seem to be a struggle. Maybe there's something I'm missing... I would love to do anything within my power to help this sweet girl. Would love some advice from the masters. Appreciate you in advance.
 
Can you place her on a flat surface and have someone take a picture of you holding her upright so we can see her legs from the front or rear? She may have a riboflavin (B2 deficiency,) but it could be splay legs, slipped tendon, or a leg bone deformity such as varus or valgus which causes the leg to bow in or turn out. Do the vitamins you have given contain riboflavin? What are you feeding them?
 
Can you place her on a flat surface and have someone take a picture of you holding her upright so we can see her legs from the front or rear? She may have a riboflavin (B2 deficiency,) but it could be splay legs, slipped tendon, or a leg bone deformity such as varus or valgus which causes the leg to bow in or turn out. Do the vitamins you have given contain riboflavin? What are you feeding them?
Thank you for your response! I will get a video for you this evening as soon as my partner returns home from work.

The packets I was giving them before, I believe, had riboflavin (pretty positive). I am no longer giving her supplements, but maybe I should? They are all eating Nutrena NatureWise chick starter grower feed 18% protein crumble as well as black soldier fly larvae treats... although she doesn't really seem to be eating these even when I put them up to her beak.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom