- Mar 30, 2011
- 1,891
- 61
- 314
My darling 2-year-old Barred Rock has always been a wonderful layer. Has never had a problem.
So today, I thought I heard her egg song (she had been in the process of laying last I had checked on her) and she was out in the run as if she'd laid her egg, eating her mash.
I went to get her egg and saw that the egg in there was not hers. I thought that was strange, but I was glad the other girl had laid, because she'd had trouble getting to her perch last night (it's too high and she's half BO, too large to easily fly that high-- I'm building a new step for her today). I had worried she might have injured herself when she had the trouble getting up to her perch last night, but she seems fine, and her egg was perfect, smaller than some of the jumbo one she lays (she's almost 8 months old), but lovely.
Then I noticed an egg attached to the Barred Rock's behind-- her egg. At first I thought it was stuck inside her, and I panicked. But then I realized I could see at least 2/3 of the egg and I wondered whether it might just be stuck to her feathers. I felt around to see whether some of it was still inside her, and I couldn't tell, and I wondered whether it could be prolapse?
I noticed a few feathers stuck to the outer end of it and I tried to remove them, but they were stuck down as if with glue. She moved around a bit and the egg did fall off her behind, to my relief, and it seemed fine-- not broken, but it did have some gluey type stuff at one end (shell not broken) and some pine shavings and poop stuck to it.
What do you think this could mean? I've never had this problem before. Could she have hurt herself carrying this egg around attached to her behind, walking around with it (causing prolapse or pulling of muscles of some kind)?
Has anyone ever seen this.
She seemed in no discomfort when she was eating the mash with the egg attached to her tail.
Do I need to be on the lookout for future problems. Could the stickiness on one end of the egg indicate some sort of problem/disease she might have? I haven't read about this before. I thought it might be egg drop syndrome, where the egg is stuck and then falls out, but she laid yesterday and hasn't seemingly been egg bound, but I wonder now.
What do you think? All advice will be appreciated. She is such a sweet hen. I wonder whether I should attempt to clean her rear end?
Could the stickiness that was on the egg be caused by mites/worms/parasites?
So today, I thought I heard her egg song (she had been in the process of laying last I had checked on her) and she was out in the run as if she'd laid her egg, eating her mash.
I went to get her egg and saw that the egg in there was not hers. I thought that was strange, but I was glad the other girl had laid, because she'd had trouble getting to her perch last night (it's too high and she's half BO, too large to easily fly that high-- I'm building a new step for her today). I had worried she might have injured herself when she had the trouble getting up to her perch last night, but she seems fine, and her egg was perfect, smaller than some of the jumbo one she lays (she's almost 8 months old), but lovely.
Then I noticed an egg attached to the Barred Rock's behind-- her egg. At first I thought it was stuck inside her, and I panicked. But then I realized I could see at least 2/3 of the egg and I wondered whether it might just be stuck to her feathers. I felt around to see whether some of it was still inside her, and I couldn't tell, and I wondered whether it could be prolapse?
I noticed a few feathers stuck to the outer end of it and I tried to remove them, but they were stuck down as if with glue. She moved around a bit and the egg did fall off her behind, to my relief, and it seemed fine-- not broken, but it did have some gluey type stuff at one end (shell not broken) and some pine shavings and poop stuck to it.
What do you think this could mean? I've never had this problem before. Could she have hurt herself carrying this egg around attached to her behind, walking around with it (causing prolapse or pulling of muscles of some kind)?
Has anyone ever seen this.
She seemed in no discomfort when she was eating the mash with the egg attached to her tail.
Do I need to be on the lookout for future problems. Could the stickiness on one end of the egg indicate some sort of problem/disease she might have? I haven't read about this before. I thought it might be egg drop syndrome, where the egg is stuck and then falls out, but she laid yesterday and hasn't seemingly been egg bound, but I wonder now.
What do you think? All advice will be appreciated. She is such a sweet hen. I wonder whether I should attempt to clean her rear end?
Could the stickiness that was on the egg be caused by mites/worms/parasites?