This is no longer an emergency but placing here for others who may experience the same issue.
Our 10 month old Australorp, Luna, started laying January 14. Her cadence was as follows:
Jan 16 first egg
Jan 17 no egg
Jan 18 Egg
Jan 19 no egg
Jan 20 Egg
Jan 21 Egg
Jan 22 no egg
Jan 23 Egg
Jan 24 Egg
Jan 25 no egg
Jan 26 Egg
Jan 27 no egg
Jan 28 Egg
Jan 29 no egg
Jan 30 no egg
Jan 31 DIED rapidly within 2 hours of trying to lay an egg.
All of her eggs were perfect in size, texture, color, taste. The yolks were large and orange.
Jan 31, She was free ranging the morning of her death, acting normal, being her chirpy self. The only thing different was that I noticed she didn't poop while out enjoying free time. Then again I could have missed it as I was keeping an eye on the busy sky for vultures and hawks. All poops in the coop and run looked completely normal. She gave me no indication at all something was wrong. We had just performed a health check 5 days prior and all was perfect.
After putting them back in the run, a couple hours later I heard the Buff Orpington screaming up a storm. I run outside to find Luna laying on her side in the run, legs splayed out straight, mouth agape, difficulty breathing, she had a prolapse. I scoop her up and her body was listless. She offered no resistance, this is a bird that never let me get near her. I run her in the house, thinking she was suddenly egg bound which is what caused the prolapse. I'm holding her with one arm filling the sink for an epsom salt bath, she is now trying to fight back, wings flailing. I place her in the soak holding her up with one arm and supporting her very weak, limp neck with my other hand. She cannot hold her head up on her own. She was still alive at this point, barely.
I remove her from the soak and wrap her in several towels and work on her prolapse. I place her on her side on the floor, she resisted slightly. I support her body with one hand holding her still and used Petroleum jelly to gently re-insert the prolapse, it wouldn't stay in. I sprayed vetrycin spray on her and tried giving sugar water slowly and gently in her beak. She was still alive - I think. I tried inserting herself back in, holding her bottom with my hand to help her tissue stay in. It wouldn't. By this time her eyes are partially closed and I think she perished during this process.
Please help me understand what went wrong, what I could have done differently to save her or prevent this in the first place. This happened four days ago but I am just now able to write about it. This loss is so devastating and sudden.
Now for my stupid questions:
1) Should I not have tried to soak her, is this what sent her into the heavens?
2) I never observed her eating any OS on the side, always available to them however. Should I have given her Calcium when she started laying despite the fact she was laying perfect eggs without issue?
3) Should I have given her calcium and a soak on the 30th which was her second consecutive day without an egg and unusual at that point, albeit early in her laying career?
4) Why couldn't I get the prolapse to stay in? What did I do wrong? What should I have done differently?
5) Could the extreme sudden heat have caused this issue? It was 80 and sunny and hot in the run even though it's surround by trees and had an opaque tarp on top. The temperature extreme happened overnight
6) How does one listen for a chicken heart beat to verify life? Where does one place a stethoscope?
7) Until rigor mortis sets in, how do you verify if a chicken is dead? Do they always close their eyes or can they remain open?
As long as her eyes were open, I assumed life. I think I was probably holding a dead chicken in my arms for at least a half hour, supporting her head and neck, supporting her bottom, talking to her.
This is my first experience with a prolapse and I feel total remorse in not recognizing some sign, any sign to take proactive action to avoid it or save her. I've read articles here on how to treat and referenced those - I just didn't have enough time or didn't catch it sooner. They were only in the run for 2-3 hours maximum before I heard the commotion.
Now I'm dealing with complete grief with the remaining two chickens. They have not bonded together as it was Luna who was the glue. Goldie, our sickly non producing comet is in zombie land, just standing around, crying. Her and Luna were best buds, always together. The orpington is the outlier always doing her own thing. I swear these birds are crying now as I've not heard these kind of vocals before, especially at roost time as Luna was always first to go in. They stand in the doorway with these pitiful mournful sounds and are reluctant to go in.
Appreciate insight and feedback so I can learn from my mistakes.
RIP sweet Luna.
Our 10 month old Australorp, Luna, started laying January 14. Her cadence was as follows:
Jan 16 first egg
Jan 17 no egg
Jan 18 Egg
Jan 19 no egg
Jan 20 Egg
Jan 21 Egg
Jan 22 no egg
Jan 23 Egg
Jan 24 Egg
Jan 25 no egg
Jan 26 Egg
Jan 27 no egg
Jan 28 Egg
Jan 29 no egg
Jan 30 no egg
Jan 31 DIED rapidly within 2 hours of trying to lay an egg.
All of her eggs were perfect in size, texture, color, taste. The yolks were large and orange.
Jan 31, She was free ranging the morning of her death, acting normal, being her chirpy self. The only thing different was that I noticed she didn't poop while out enjoying free time. Then again I could have missed it as I was keeping an eye on the busy sky for vultures and hawks. All poops in the coop and run looked completely normal. She gave me no indication at all something was wrong. We had just performed a health check 5 days prior and all was perfect.
After putting them back in the run, a couple hours later I heard the Buff Orpington screaming up a storm. I run outside to find Luna laying on her side in the run, legs splayed out straight, mouth agape, difficulty breathing, she had a prolapse. I scoop her up and her body was listless. She offered no resistance, this is a bird that never let me get near her. I run her in the house, thinking she was suddenly egg bound which is what caused the prolapse. I'm holding her with one arm filling the sink for an epsom salt bath, she is now trying to fight back, wings flailing. I place her in the soak holding her up with one arm and supporting her very weak, limp neck with my other hand. She cannot hold her head up on her own. She was still alive at this point, barely.
I remove her from the soak and wrap her in several towels and work on her prolapse. I place her on her side on the floor, she resisted slightly. I support her body with one hand holding her still and used Petroleum jelly to gently re-insert the prolapse, it wouldn't stay in. I sprayed vetrycin spray on her and tried giving sugar water slowly and gently in her beak. She was still alive - I think. I tried inserting herself back in, holding her bottom with my hand to help her tissue stay in. It wouldn't. By this time her eyes are partially closed and I think she perished during this process.
Please help me understand what went wrong, what I could have done differently to save her or prevent this in the first place. This happened four days ago but I am just now able to write about it. This loss is so devastating and sudden.
Now for my stupid questions:
1) Should I not have tried to soak her, is this what sent her into the heavens?
2) I never observed her eating any OS on the side, always available to them however. Should I have given her Calcium when she started laying despite the fact she was laying perfect eggs without issue?
3) Should I have given her calcium and a soak on the 30th which was her second consecutive day without an egg and unusual at that point, albeit early in her laying career?
4) Why couldn't I get the prolapse to stay in? What did I do wrong? What should I have done differently?
5) Could the extreme sudden heat have caused this issue? It was 80 and sunny and hot in the run even though it's surround by trees and had an opaque tarp on top. The temperature extreme happened overnight
6) How does one listen for a chicken heart beat to verify life? Where does one place a stethoscope?
7) Until rigor mortis sets in, how do you verify if a chicken is dead? Do they always close their eyes or can they remain open?
As long as her eyes were open, I assumed life. I think I was probably holding a dead chicken in my arms for at least a half hour, supporting her head and neck, supporting her bottom, talking to her.
This is my first experience with a prolapse and I feel total remorse in not recognizing some sign, any sign to take proactive action to avoid it or save her. I've read articles here on how to treat and referenced those - I just didn't have enough time or didn't catch it sooner. They were only in the run for 2-3 hours maximum before I heard the commotion.
Now I'm dealing with complete grief with the remaining two chickens. They have not bonded together as it was Luna who was the glue. Goldie, our sickly non producing comet is in zombie land, just standing around, crying. Her and Luna were best buds, always together. The orpington is the outlier always doing her own thing. I swear these birds are crying now as I've not heard these kind of vocals before, especially at roost time as Luna was always first to go in. They stand in the doorway with these pitiful mournful sounds and are reluctant to go in.
Appreciate insight and feedback so I can learn from my mistakes.
RIP sweet Luna.