- Jul 20, 2011
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Just this afternoon, I had noticed that some of my 9 week old babies that are outside in an all-in-one coop had bald, bloody, swollen patches of skin near their tails on their backs. We were not sure what was causing the problem, so we put some noesporin on the wounds and put the 2 chicks back. Then we watched for a while and we saw the smallest chick, a little yellow one who used to be so sweet, run up to a chick and pull a feather out of it's back near it's tail, where the wounds are on the other 2. Then, she ate the feather. We separated her from the others (they are outside, she is inside in her old brooder, calling for her "friends") . Now, we see some of the other chicks pecking at the wounds on the other chicks' backs. They are not pulling feathers (YET) but they are distressing the 2 babies. What causes this kind of thing? There are 8 chicks, all 9 weeks old today, in an all-in-one coop. The coop part is 2x3, maybe 1x3, I'm not sure, but it is somewhat roomy. The outside area that they run around in during the day is 24 square feet. If they are too crowded, one of the chicks is a rooster, and I could get rid of him (once the wounds on his back heal (he was one of the pickees)). I am just waiting for a friend to build her coop so that she could take the hens, but if it takes much longer, and the chicks get bigger, how do I prevent more feather pulling and cannibalism??? Please help!!!
