Willow is doing great and is being reintegrated back into her flock. The weather still gets well below freezing at night, and some of the days are still pretty cold, so I’ve only take her out for a few hours at a time and she still comes in the house overnight.

On the 1st day outside, I brought Willow out and the whole flock stopped and stared. I put her on the other side of the fence so they could see her but not get to her. The rooster (who is kept separated from the hens) was thrilled, Willow is his favorite. The hens looked at her for a minute and then went about their business. I’ve read that chickens can remember both humans and chickens, and that seemed to be the case. I let the hens out to free range, which is where Willow was. They went up to her and chased her a bit, but then they got busy looking for worms. Willow wandered into the coop, and when the hens also went in there, there were a few little skirmishes, chest bumps, and jumping, but not too much worse that what it was like before. Willow has always been the low hen in the pecking order and picked on a bit when in a smaller area or when treats are around.

She was so cute, when I went to check on her in the coop after her dust bath she ran up to the gate where I was, like “ok this was fun but I’m ready for my nap on the couch now”.

The second day she was more skittish around the hens, running from them when they walked in her direction. She stayed away from them and she jumped on the roost if they had to pass by her. I know I put her in with them quickly, but I was in with her most of the time to monitor them. If she was a totally new hen I would have done the slower method keeping her separated for longer, but I could tell the rooster definitely remembered her so I figured the hens did too.

The 3rd day it was too cold and windy with mixed precipitation, Willow stayed in the house.

Over the weekend (days 4 and 5) went pretty well. Willow still prefers to keep away from the hens and sticks close to the fence where the rooster is, they enjoy being next to each other. But after about 2 hours Willow paces in front of the gate, waiting for me to take her back in the house. Yesterday and today (days 6 and 7) it’s pretty much been the same thing. The hens mostly ignore her but I did see a little chasing take place.

I was hoping that by this weekend she could stay outside for good, but now I’m not sure she likes that idea! Even when she was a chick, Willow didn’t hang with the other hens much, so I don’t think she missed being away from them. She likes the roo but he’s young and mated her bare last summer, so I won’t make that mistake again.

I didn’t see Willow eat much while she was outside, and her crop was small, so I plan on putting a feed and water bowl up in the back roost. I have more feeders then hens but for now Willow seems to prefer to be off the ground when in the coop. I will continue getting Willow reacclamated to the outside and the flock with the hope of having her be a normal outdoor chicken soon. She’s only been out for 2-3 hours a day while I’m home and checking on her often. BUT we bonded quite a bit while she was sick so maybe that’s why she doesn’t want to stay outside too long. Plus the weather still sucks! I also wonder if getting a few chicks would help, maybe she would move up in the pecking order or at least make a chicken friend...
 
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I know this is an old thread but I just wanted to say how encouraging this has been to read this. We have Winnie, the equivalent of your Willow. She's our special girl and has had egg laying issues her whole 1.5 years of life. She's currently incredibly sick and I'm considering the spay which would be in 7 days. I'm so worried about the surgery complications, aftercare and recovery, and quality of life after surgery but this has helped so much. I haven't made a decision yet, but the only other option is to euthanize and I just can't bring myself to think about that. Just wanted to stop by and say thank you for the detailed updates and for sharing Willow's story.

Pics below of Winnie during healthier times:
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I know this is an old thread but I just wanted to say how encouraging this has been to read this. We have Winnie, the equivalent of your Willow. She's our special girl and has had egg laying issues her whole 1.5 years of life. She's currently incredibly sick and I'm considering the spay which would be in 7 days. I'm so worried about the surgery complications, aftercare and recovery, and quality of life after surgery but this has helped so much. I haven't made a decision yet, but the only other option is to euthanize and I just can't bring myself to think about that. Just wanted to stop by and say thank you for the detailed updates and for sharing Willow's story.
I'm so sorry to hear about your girl.
What kind of egg laying issues have you been dealing with?
 
I'm so sorry to hear about your girl.
What kind of egg laying issues have you been dealing with?
Thank you for the reply. Poor girl's been eggbound 3 times this past year. Each time we tried everything the vet suggested and suggestions we found online but ultimately we were only able to help her by having the egg broken out (one time there were two in there). It was always invasive and dangerous but she recovered quickly every time. This time, the egg hasn't made it far at all and the only option that keeps her around is to spay. The vet agrees with us that something in her reproductive tract isn't functioning properly and this probably would've happened sooner or later.
 
Thank you for the reply. Poor girl's been eggbound 3 times this past year. Each time we tried everything the vet suggested and suggestions we found online but ultimately we were only able to help her by having the egg broken out (one time there were two in there). It was always invasive and dangerous but she recovered quickly every time. This time, the egg hasn't made it far at all and the only option that keeps her around is to spay. The vet agrees with us that something in her reproductive tract isn't functioning properly and this probably would've happened sooner or later.
Poor thing.
I hope she can pass this egg quickly and the procedure works well for her.

Are you giving her calcium supplements now to help try to get this egg out?
 
Poor thing.
I hope she can pass this egg quickly and the procedure works well for her.

Are you giving her calcium supplements now to help try to get this egg out?

We were giving her calcium but like all the other times, they're not helping. She's received so much love this past week in supplements, warm baths, indoor living, but nothing has seemed to help. The bad news we were told today is that this particular egg is unpassable. It never formed a shell, is sitting very high up in the reproductive tract (not a good candidate for aspiration) and has a deflated shape. And since her last vet visit a week ago, it hasn't moved at all.
 
We were giving her calcium but like all the other times, they're not helping. She's received so much love this past week in supplements, warm baths, indoor living, but nothing has seemed to help. The bad news we were told today is that this particular egg is unpassable. It never formed a shell, is sitting very high up in the reproductive tract (not a good candidate for aspiration) and has a deflated shape. And since her last vet visit a week ago, it hasn't moved at all.
How did the vet figure this egg out?
Did you have X-rays taken?
Is he going to just wait and see what happens or?
 
How did the vet figure this egg out?
Did you have X-rays taken?
Is he going to just wait and see what happens or?

Yes, she's had two x-rays so far. One preliminary about a week ago and another follow-up this morning. The egg has been the same shape and in the same place for a week while she's progressively gotten much worse. Our options at the moment are to prepare for end of life arrangements or consider the spay. She's such a tough girl and the sweetest chicken. I really want to try to prolong her life as much as I can but I'm really struggling with the difficulty and invasiveness of the spay. At the same time she's so special to us, I'm not doing well with the thought of euthanizing either.
 

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