- Mar 11, 2012
- 1
- 0
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Hi everyone, I've been reading these forums for help and advice for months, but now I find I have to ask for help.
My chicken, Henmiony, has a terrible gash in her neck. I found her yesterday, sluggish and quiet in her nest, and fear I may have neglected discovering her wound earlier since she just started laying, and has been broody.
She's usually very feisty, but I scooped her up too easily without much fuss, so I was super worried. Right away you can see scabby damp featherless skin on her neck, which had me very concerned (and feeling horrible for not seeing sooner-- how had I missed this for so long as for there to be scabs?). Even worse, my friend over visiting, a pediatrician, helped look her over and when she gently lifted her neck feathers above the damp area, found the gash. It was gruesome... I'll describe it briefly as white fatty tissue, pink muscle, and... just a deep, awful wound.
I have a dog, an English pointer, who so far has avoided the chickens (for 7 months now) like they're ghosts and she's Pac Woman. BUT last winter she had been left alone with my last two hens and fatally mauled her. (I know where the blame lies there, and I feel very bad about it.)
Henmiony also has a sister, who I thought was very easy going and the less feisty of the two, nut today as I was letting Henmione out for some sunshine and fresh air, Wendizzle came running over as if to start right in on poor Henmiony's neck.
Could canabalism have done this? How could I have failed to notice it? Or do you think maybe I'm wilfully ignoring the elephant in the room, my dog, with her innocent little butter-wouldn't-melt-in-my-mouth expression?
I also worry that I'm missing maybe a root cause -- could the scabby area be perhaps depluming mite-caused, and the scabs and missing feathers (and even canabalism?) be the final result?
As for treatment... electrolytes for shock/blood loss, soluble tetracycline as a systematic antibiotic to fight or forestall infection, and later today I plan on dressing her wound with Red Kite, recommended over the phone by a vet (who didn't give much for her chances).
I know I've screwed up, but any advice now
, and telling me how I screwed up and if there's anything else I can do for her... I'm thankful for any and all advice.
I tried to get a zoomed in picture today without disturbing her any more, so I'll try to upload that.
Thanks,
Useph
My chicken, Henmiony, has a terrible gash in her neck. I found her yesterday, sluggish and quiet in her nest, and fear I may have neglected discovering her wound earlier since she just started laying, and has been broody.
She's usually very feisty, but I scooped her up too easily without much fuss, so I was super worried. Right away you can see scabby damp featherless skin on her neck, which had me very concerned (and feeling horrible for not seeing sooner-- how had I missed this for so long as for there to be scabs?). Even worse, my friend over visiting, a pediatrician, helped look her over and when she gently lifted her neck feathers above the damp area, found the gash. It was gruesome... I'll describe it briefly as white fatty tissue, pink muscle, and... just a deep, awful wound.
I have a dog, an English pointer, who so far has avoided the chickens (for 7 months now) like they're ghosts and she's Pac Woman. BUT last winter she had been left alone with my last two hens and fatally mauled her. (I know where the blame lies there, and I feel very bad about it.)
Henmiony also has a sister, who I thought was very easy going and the less feisty of the two, nut today as I was letting Henmione out for some sunshine and fresh air, Wendizzle came running over as if to start right in on poor Henmiony's neck.
Could canabalism have done this? How could I have failed to notice it? Or do you think maybe I'm wilfully ignoring the elephant in the room, my dog, with her innocent little butter-wouldn't-melt-in-my-mouth expression?
I also worry that I'm missing maybe a root cause -- could the scabby area be perhaps depluming mite-caused, and the scabs and missing feathers (and even canabalism?) be the final result?
As for treatment... electrolytes for shock/blood loss, soluble tetracycline as a systematic antibiotic to fight or forestall infection, and later today I plan on dressing her wound with Red Kite, recommended over the phone by a vet (who didn't give much for her chances).
I know I've screwed up, but any advice now
, and telling me how I screwed up and if there's anything else I can do for her... I'm thankful for any and all advice.
I tried to get a zoomed in picture today without disturbing her any more, so I'll try to upload that.
Thanks,
Useph