What are the odds of a three-week old baby chick getting scalped by a rooster https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/healing-a-severely-injured-baby-chick.71976/ and eight years later, having the same thing happen again?
My eight-year old Speckled Sussex hen Geobett got scalped by the junior rooster today. He's been working up to this and I should have taken more seriously his obsession with her.
Toots, a three-year old EE/Cream Legbar mix, generally chases down Geobett until she submits, but this time, he cornered her in the coop. When I responded to what sounded like a bobcat trying to break out of a wooden crate, I found Geobett with all the skin ripped off her head and Toots standing at the ready to finish her off.
I cleaned her head with Veterycin wound spray, let it dry and loaded the wound with triple antibiotic ointment. Just as I did eight years ago, I'll spend the next six weeks, cleaning the wound twice a day and keeping it moist with the ointment.
No, I'm not going to kill him, but he's lost run privileges. He's lucky I'll let him sleep in the coop come night.
My eight-year old Speckled Sussex hen Geobett got scalped by the junior rooster today. He's been working up to this and I should have taken more seriously his obsession with her.
Toots, a three-year old EE/Cream Legbar mix, generally chases down Geobett until she submits, but this time, he cornered her in the coop. When I responded to what sounded like a bobcat trying to break out of a wooden crate, I found Geobett with all the skin ripped off her head and Toots standing at the ready to finish her off.
I cleaned her head with Veterycin wound spray, let it dry and loaded the wound with triple antibiotic ointment. Just as I did eight years ago, I'll spend the next six weeks, cleaning the wound twice a day and keeping it moist with the ointment.
No, I'm not going to kill him, but he's lost run privileges. He's lucky I'll let him sleep in the coop come night.