It's been a long time since I've been on BYC, but I knew it was the place to come for an answer! I have 6 Red Stars, 1 BLK. Australorpe and 1 Buff Orpington that are all 2 years old. This spring I bought 6 EE's that have been kept seperate from my older ladies in a huge galvanized trough (like they keep them in at the feed store during chick days). This is the same thing I did 2 yrs ago with the others. I never had any issues. A couple weeks ago I noticed that 2 of them had bare spots on their backs like they were being picked at/on. I kept an eye on them and one seemed to be drying up and getting better while the other was getting worse. Last night I went out to find the worse one laying dead and nearly picked bald
This is the first casualty I've experienced and am saddened.
I read a lot about EEs before getting any and never once read that they could be aggressive..? Has anything similar ever happened to any of you? I thought maybe they were outgrowing their space and perhaps thats why, but my RSs were in there much longer and never had a problem. Sorry this is lengthy but.... today I thought I would take them out, they are now 8wks old and let them run with my older ladies and acclimate. My concern is that if this is not somewhat of a 'normal' behavioral chicken thing that happens and they are sickly or diseased (which I do not believe, they all are gorgeous and eat/drink just fine) I don't want to expose them to my healthy older flock.
Looking for some help - thank you all!
Brenda Lee
Heritage Farmstead
I read a lot about EEs before getting any and never once read that they could be aggressive..? Has anything similar ever happened to any of you? I thought maybe they were outgrowing their space and perhaps thats why, but my RSs were in there much longer and never had a problem. Sorry this is lengthy but.... today I thought I would take them out, they are now 8wks old and let them run with my older ladies and acclimate. My concern is that if this is not somewhat of a 'normal' behavioral chicken thing that happens and they are sickly or diseased (which I do not believe, they all are gorgeous and eat/drink just fine) I don't want to expose them to my healthy older flock.
Looking for some help - thank you all!
Brenda Lee
Heritage Farmstead
