Best remedies and supportive care for pasty butt?

BlueShadow

Songster
8 Years
Jun 13, 2015
498
450
216
Nebraska
I have a 3 day old chick with pasty butt. She has been weak since she hatched, and the stress of constant cleaning and straining to poop is starting to take a toll. She is definitely more lethargic tonight than she was this morning.

What are the best supportive care measures I can take?
I am already:
Washing her butt under a gentle trickle of warm water
Pat dry with paper towel
Warm her up with hair dryer on warm heat & lo air settings for a minute or so
A few drops of diluted NutriDrench + electrolytes for some nutrition

I am planning to make a separate brooder nursery for her tomorrow.

I am open to all suggestions: Better ways to clean her, better feed, what can I do to improve my care?
 
I have a 3 day old chick with pasty butt. She has been weak since she hatched, and the stress of constant cleaning and straining to poop is starting to take a toll. She is definitely more lethargic tonight than she was this morning.

What are the best supportive care measures I can take?
I am already:
Washing her butt under a gentle trickle of warm water
Pat dry with paper towel
Warm her up with hair dryer on warm heat & lo air settings for a minute or so
A few drops of diluted NutriDrench + electrolytes for some nutrition

I am planning to make a separate brooder nursery for her tomorrow.

I am open to all suggestions: Better ways to clean her, better feed, what can I do to improve my care?
Sounds like you are doing a good job. A few things -

As long as you have a well and appropriately heated brooder, you don't need to use a hair dryer. It's my opinion that this unduly stresses out a bird who is already struggling a bit. If you watch, their down will dry in a matter of minutes in the brooder.

Second, we have nearly completely watched pasty butt go away after feeding fermented feed a few times a week.

Here is a good video on fermenting feed. You'll want to exnay the grains he uses because your chicks are still too small for that. You can just use a mason jar or similar on your counter to start, and maybe 1/2 cup 2x/week minimum or as much as you'd like 👍

 
Raw honey and apple cider vinegar for her water. (2 tbsp/gal for each) the acv is specifically for the probiotics.

I hair dry them until they are dry, as opposed to patting dry with a paper towel. I think it dry them faster, and so is better (but that's me)

What are you feeding her?
 
@BastyPutt's fermented feed suggestion is a good one. I haven't tried it with the chicks, but my adult flock has been getting fermented feed a couple times a week as a "treat" and I don't have poopy feathers anymore... Ever.

Acv is probably a good stop gap until you have feed that is fermented.
 
I am feeding a feed from my local co-op. This is what I have used for years. I am wondering if it’s an old batch of feed or something because it’s been several years since I’ve dealt with pasty butt. This is unusual.

I can try ACV and fermenting.
 
I am feeding a feed from my local co-op. This is what I have used for years. I am wondering if it’s an old batch of feed or something because it’s been several years since I’ve dealt with pasty butt. This is unusual.

I can try ACV and fermenting.
Pasty butt is typically something that is pretty common for anyone who has a dozen or more chicks. We used to get one or two per batch, more if they were from a feed store and had sat there for a few days.
 
Pasty butt is typically something that is pretty common for anyone who has a dozen or more chicks. We used to get one or two per batch, more if they were from a feed store and had sat there for a few days.

That could be it. In recent years, I have only been getting 6 chicks each year. Except for the year I ended up with 24 😂 But they were kept in separate pens because some were broilers, some were layers, some were bantams.

I don't mean that I never get pasty butt, but it's been very minor. Chick has a little poo stuck to his bum, wipe it off once or twice, done. This is more severe, and I haven't dealt with that probably in over 10 years.
 
That could be it. In recent years, I have only been getting 6 chicks each year. Except for the year I ended up with 24 😂 But they were kept in separate pens because some were broilers, some were layers, some were bantams.

I don't mean that I never get pasty butt, but it's been very minor. Chick has a little poo stuck to his bum, wipe it off once or twice, done. This is more severe, and I haven't dealt with that probably in over 10 years.
The last round of chicks I got had probably 1 out of 5 that had pasty butt, for a day or 2. I had one chick that had it pretty badly for 4 days, but that chick also had conjoined toes...

Its also how I got to blow drying them, as they started to pick on the ones with any amount of damp fluff. I am a fan of acv, when I first get chicks. I think it helps after the shipping stress.
 
The last round of chicks I got had probably 1 out of 5 that had pasty butt, for a day or 2. I had one chick that had it pretty badly for 4 days, but that chick also had conjoined toes...

Its also how I got to blow drying them, as they started to pick on the ones with any amount of damp fluff. I am a fan of acv, when I first get chicks. I think it helps after the shipping stress.
All great info in this post. 100%. I think with the pasty butt numbers are exactly what someone should expect bringing home chicks.

And A+ on the ACV. I keep giving it to them their entire life, and with the exception of the first week, they will have a choice of "plain" water or ACV.

Just like we take an ibuprofen for a headache, I 100% believe the chickens medicate themselves with the ACV water. Some days they won't touch it, then occasionally you'll see one over there swigging it. Pretty neat.
 

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