Barred rock dead by dogs pool

sawilliams

Songster
Nov 12, 2015
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Nor Cal
Sorry I'm not really sure where to post this. We came home from a hike this afternoon (gone for about 6 hours) to find my barred rock dead by our dogs pool. The chickens free range and regularly are in the dogs area or drinking from the pool. Daisy is a blood hound mix about 4 years old on about a 20 foot aerial run line and great with the chickens expect that she eats eggs and wont share her dinner. Anyways back to the barred, she had issues a short while back that I though we would lose her, and she hadn't laid an egg in at least a few months that I could confirm, suffered a minor limp that was only occasional that I couldn't confirm a cuase or injury. I suspect the limp was possibly related to what ever had her acting oddly before. Symptoms before she slow moving hiding away from others and sleeping under the coop, nothing ever seemed deffinatly wrong and she was eating and drinking, eventually she recovered started roaming with the flock again and sleeping in the coop again. Just had that occasional limp and no confirmed eggs.

So when I found her, it was actually becuase of my dog that i noticed her. The daisy was acting odd about what looked like a rock about 3 feet from her pool (about a 3x5 water trough). I realized there isn't supposed to be a rock there so I went to check and saw it was the barred rock. She had clear been licked and Daisy seemed clearly distressed about the chicken. So I pick up the chicken and moved it away from the run area for further examination. I could not find any bite or injury marking but I noticed all the feathers seemed damp, and not like dog licking damp but like stood in the rain damp, or I guess in my case probably fell in the pool damp.

I mean I'm very proud of my dog for having a chicken dead in her area for an unknown amount of time and not trying to eat it. But I guess right now I can only assume the chicken was getting water from the pool, rather then walking back down to the coop, fell in the pool, managed to get back out, but soaking wet and probably having submerged dry drowned there by the pool, where my blood hound tried to revive her by licking her back to health. Funny thing is Daisy loved that chicken, she could care less about most of the others but she always wanted to smell the barreds butt. She would walk though the crowd of hens just to try to get a sniff of the barred.

Anyways I did a quick head count and all others seem accounted for.

Now to figure out how and where to place water containers so the chickens arent as tempted to drink from the pool. We plan to re-fence the back yard to make it dog safe to get her off the lead and hopefully reduce the flow of chickens, they would still have access to the front yard and most of thier shade spots. The fencing right now is 3ft vinyl with horizontal beams which daisy can easily get out of and she doesn't understand her boundaries. It's all a work in progress.
 
Well now the is a second, though this one is alive just wet at the moment. It's odd as we have had the pool/stock tank for at least 6 months. I'm not sureif maybe she scared or knocked it in or if the water was too low abed this one just fell in. Though the water has been lower. But the day time temps are lower today too 80ish I think verse 90-100+ most of the summer. Anyways daisy was rather upset so I went out to see what was going on and found one of my cinnamon queens by the back door soaked and shivering. I brought her in wrapped her in a towel blowed dried her and she is resting in daisy's cage under a heat lamp with vitamin water and scrambled egg. Hopefully she will be ok.

I'm filling the pool so hopefully if they get up there again they won't have to lean so far as to fall in and after I check her again i'm going to scour the house for shallow feed trays I can use as water dishes for the chickens...

The barred was about 2 years old and the cinnamon is a little over a year old.
 
I have like a gallon dog dish these are metal stainless I keep under a water tank we have outside but the birds cannot get at it ... funny thing I had this water tank from an RV we cut down the middle I took the full length now open tank for my first water in the main coop .. no one ever drowned in it, enter closed buckets with nipples 4 drown go figure
 
I have like a gallon dog dish these are metal stainless I keep under a water tank we have outside but the birds cannot get at it ... funny thing I had this water tank from an RV we cut down the middle I took the full length now open tank for my first water in the main coop .. no one ever drowned in it, enter closed buckets with nipples 4 drown go figure
That's crazy... chickens are definitely smarter (or dumber) then they want us to believe.

So my cinnamon queen seems to be doing ok. She has eaten almost all of her egg and has been preening herself. I'm going to wait a little longer before I turn the heat lamp off I want to keep get inside until I'm sure she's ok with out the extra heat. I would hate to have to keep her inside over night but i don't want to shock her a second time if she isn't maintaining her body temp.
 
Is there a way to move it out of their reach now they are more prone as one or more have discovered it
No not really, I mean they have been getting up on it for quite a while to get water and these are the first issues with it. Like i said the plan of to re-fence the back yard so the dog can't get out and hopefully the chickens won't get in so. And by re-fence I mean we plan to hang probably 4x4 twisted wire field fencing across the perimeter of the existing vinyl fence. This way the dog won't have to be on a run line when she's outside. I might go smaller to help keep the chickens out but the goal for the chickens would be that they could still free range without pooping all over my back patio, and apparently now also not have access to the dog pool. But i'm trying to get the budget rebalanced before I can go buy fencing. There are still a few expenses that take priority over the dog ants the chickens right now. I would just leave the chickens in the run, but I have a few fence jumpers that have already been clipped and are still making it over the run.
 
We have a pond and though my chickens don’t go into it normally, we had one avoid being caught one year and we watched as she swam across this one acre pond in freezing weather. I have seen others here on BYC in swimming pools, but if the water was too low for your chicken to walk out of, I can imagine that drowning might happen. I wonder if leaning a small ladder down to the bottom where they could climb out would work? Or changing the dog’s pool to a shorter kiddie pool might be safer. Sorry that you lost the hen and I hope that the other one is okay. We have a bloodhound, Elvis, who loves to wade in the pond several times a day.
 

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