6 week-old Silkie (and me) attacked by a hawk yesterday

Swbertrand1

Crowing
7 Years
Apr 21, 2018
1,184
1,670
311
Wilmington, NC
Never seen anything like this before: I was outside yesterday (07-19-2025) with my precious Silkie baby, Lil Bit, that stays by my side as I work in the yard. At about 6:45pm ET and out of nowhere, I was slammed in the back of my lower leg by a hawk going after Lil Bit, who was right at my left foot. It knocked me down, while the two birds (hawk and tiny Silkie) tumbled under a big bush of sea-grass that I had been standing beside.

Instincts took over instantly, and I grabbed the hawk by the neck (bare-handed no less!), scooped up the baby and screamed for my husband. He took the baby, but she appeared to die in his hands within seconds as her eyes glazed over and closed, then her neck went limp. He persisted with her, rubbing her gently over and over, talking to her saying her name and to stay with us, even chirping to her repeatedly. A half minute later, she showed some life signs, so we wrapped her up instantly to keep her warm, and I held her for the next 2 hours gently talking to her non-stop.

She survived the night and is still alive as of now (2:00pm ET), but her level of shock concerned us so much last night that we didn't look for wounds though there was a tiny bit of blood on my husband's fingers when rubbing her. Her level of shock remains high, and we found some dried blood on both sides of the rear lower head/ear area this morning, worse on the L than on the R. We cleaned all the blood off, but can find no punctures, but we're near certain that she was either bitten on both sides of the head, or talons got her on both sides, the L side of her head taking the brunt of the attack. She might have even taken the attack in the ear canal, but with Silkies' black skin and so many soft feathers, it's nearly impossible to tell. Also, she has a lot of swelling on the L side as shown in the photos.

We've managed to get electrolytes in her via a small dosing syringe, are keeping her warm, and watching her closely, but it seems as if she may have a neurological issue caused by the attack, or she's just in heavy shock. If we touch her, it seems to irritate her a bit, but we are getting chirrs and cheeps out of her even in her condition. We've cleaned the areas of swelling with antibiotic soap and applied antibiotic cream, and she's opened her eyes a couple of times though they have remained mostly closed since the attack last evening.

Last, she had a full crop when this occurred, but it hasn't gone down much at all since the attack, and she has normal stools through this writing. The vet is an option, and we're not scared of big vet bills, but short of identifying a fracture that we won't be able to treat effectively anyway, what more is there to do?

We are also concerned about her crop not going down much at all, but she's expending maybe 10% of the energy she usually does...

Link to her behavior post-attack:

Photos: Note the swelling that can be seen in the comparison photos taken from Left Rear and Right Rear of her head in the 4th and 5th photos below.

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When cleaning and redressing the L side of her face, we finally found the wound, which clearly looks like a talon puncture.
Updated photos:
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I've never had a chicken at the vet, but what I'd be hoping for is antibiotics, if they cannot provide anything else. My concern outside of her extreme shock and possible deeper injuries would be an infection setting in, either from the puncture wounds or just due to her becoming weak and therefore more suseptible to anything present in her normal environment. I can't get antibiotics where I am without a vet most of the time, so that is why (assuming I have the money and a vet that would see a chicken) a vet could be a benefit here.

If you can get antibiotics in another way, I don't know if I'd be expecting other benefit other than extra peace of mind. It could definitely be very expensive to just get a sad answer. If she stabilizes and shows she has fight left, possibly it would be more worthwhile?

I'm so sorry this happened. Only you will know the best decision for you. Definitely keep treating for the shock; warm, dark, and those electrolytes are what I'd be doing as well. Just be careful she doesn't aspirate. Wishing you both the best!
 
I'm wondering if her injuries could be primarily from impact, as you say the hawk knocked you down. A hard blow like that might cause everything you're describing, even without penetration, including the bleeding. I could certainly be wrong. She could have neuroligical damage at least for a while. I think you're right to treat for shock, but time may be your best friend in this case. Poor little thing, I hope she does well.
 
I've never had a chicken at the vet, but what I'd be hoping for is antibiotics, if they cannot provide anything else. My concern outside of her extreme shock and possible deeper injuries would be an infection setting in, either from the puncture wounds or just due to her becoming weak and therefore more suseptible to anything present in her normal environment. I can't get antibiotics where I am without a vet most of the time, so that is why (assuming I have the money and a vet that would see a chicken) a vet could be a benefit here.

If you can get antibiotics in another way, I don't know if I'd be expecting other benefit other than extra peace of mind. It could definitely be very expensive to just get a sad answer. If she stabilizes and shows she has fight left, possibly it would be more worthwhile?

I'm so sorry this happened. Only you will know the best decision for you. Definitely keep treating for the shock; warm, dark, and those electrolytes are what I'd be doing as well. Just be careful she doesn't aspirate. Wishing you both the best!
Thx so much! Doing everything we can... She's got to make it!
 
I've never had a chicken at the vet, but what I'd be hoping for is antibiotics, if they cannot provide anything else. My concern outside of her extreme shock and possible deeper injuries would be an infection setting in, either from the puncture wounds or just due to her becoming weak and therefore more suseptible to anything present in her normal environment. I can't get antibiotics where I am without a vet most of the time, so that is why (assuming I have the money and a vet that would see a chicken) a vet could be a benefit here.

If you can get antibiotics in another way, I don't know if I'd be expecting other benefit other than extra peace of mind. It could definitely be very expensive to just get a sad answer. If she stabilizes and shows she has fight left, possibly it would be more worthwhile?

I'm so sorry this happened. Only you will know the best decision for you. Definitely keep treating for the shock; warm, dark, and those electrolytes are what I'd be doing as well. Just be careful she doesn't aspirate. Wishing you both the best!
Thx so much, we do have antibiotics, and will definitely do what's right. Appreciate your input😁🌴😁
 
Hi,

You're doing so well by her. I too believe I'd put her on some antibiotics assuming there's a puncture somewhere. Better safe than sorry. I was going to give you links to purchase online, but just saw you post you have some. Better than waiting two/three days for delivery.

She's going to need some sustanence too. What I've mixed to feed a sick chick/chicken, is a raw egg yolk, a couple drops of honey, a couple drops of chick vitamins like Poultry Cell or Nutri-Drench, and then we've got some baby parrot food here I stir in. I grind up their crumbles into dust, mix a little of that in, then add water to make it work in a syringe. Try feed it a drop of it on the right side (it's right side) of it's beak. If she takes it, keep going, letting it swallow in between.

I sure hope she pulls through!
 
I was going to give you links to purchase online, but just saw you post you have some. Better than waiting two/three days for delivery.
Hey. Thanks for the reply! Please go ahead and post the link as we need to update our "chicken" antibiotics. We are using a prescription-strength antibiotic cream, but we need liquid antibiotics to keep on hand for the birds...
 
Swelling is a big concern for us where this little girl is concerned.
With the wound being on her head and with the large amount of swelling, we're wondering if this might not be putting pressure on the brain (my husband had a traumatic brain injury 20 years ago, and he had a section of his skull removed to save his life so that the brain could swell without cutting off blood flow).
My husband is going to try to get her to the vet first thing in the morning to try to get some oral antibiotics and some anti-inflammatory medication............

On an upnote, her crop went down significantly during the day today (Sunday) as we approached 24 hours since the attack, so that's a relief. Now we need to turn toward keeping her fed until we can get control of the swelling.
 
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