I just wanted to give an update, even tho I’m not the OP, the advice given has made a huge difference.
My albino hen is up and about. She walks recreationally, not just to get food and water. Her balance isn’t great, and she gets knocked over often, but doesn’t have much trouble getting back up. She can’t get in or out of the sandbox gracefully lol but she can do it. I give her 2, 400 capsules per day, morning and night. She is much stronger now and fights me like crazy and often tries to spit it out after I think it’s in, so I started putting some in the water as well.
A couple weeks ago she was looking better, and I was busy, and I missed a few treatments here and there over the course of several days, and she dramatically declined. It seems she probably has a long term disability/internal birth defect that causes this, and she will probably need supplements for the rest of her life. I’m hopeful that once the damage is repaired, I can maintain her with just the amount in the water.
She started out lying down 99% of the time and flopping to the food and water, occasionally getting up into wheelbarrow position, face down in the litter. Slowly she would get up into the wheelbarrow position more often, and would also stand upright sometimes. She had a lot of trouble when I changed the chips, and they weren’t as compacted, she would flail her legs and not be able to get enough resistance to stand, just digging birdie snow angels in the litter. I started taping a layer of paper towels to the bottom of the cage so she would eventually hit bottom and get enough friction to stand. This week I did not add paper towels, and she did not have trouble standing at all in the fresh chips.
As she progressed, she would stand all the time and rest back on her hocks to sleep, because if she laid down she couldn’t get up without tremendous effort. But she has started laying down to sleep like normal, and even though she’s blind, she has gotten really fast at running away when I reach for her to get her out, but she inevitably hits a wall, through no fault of her balance strength or small legs, blind is still blind after all.