- May 21, 2013
- 8
- 0
- 7
hi all,
we have had chickens for 3 days and already some problems! in the first night we lost a chicken to a stoat. at the same time, another chicken lost one of her back claws. (we have now reinforced the coop, so no more stoat attacks). it seemed to scab over but now 2 days later she is bleeding again from the same place.
following their ordeal the chickens are much more nervous than when they arrived. we tried to catch the bleeding one to put antiseptic and cornflour on it (we were told that cornflour clots the blood and we did this with the original injury) but they do not trust us and we stopped after feeling it was stressing them out too much trying to catch her.
is it more important to catch her and tend to the wound, or leave her and hope that it stops bleeding and doesn't get infected?
my partner feels that she is losing too much blood, whereas to me it doesn't look like a worrying amount. how much is too much bleeding?
we are thinking of trying to catch her again at dusk when she will be sleepier.
many thanks for your advice.
we have had chickens for 3 days and already some problems! in the first night we lost a chicken to a stoat. at the same time, another chicken lost one of her back claws. (we have now reinforced the coop, so no more stoat attacks). it seemed to scab over but now 2 days later she is bleeding again from the same place.
following their ordeal the chickens are much more nervous than when they arrived. we tried to catch the bleeding one to put antiseptic and cornflour on it (we were told that cornflour clots the blood and we did this with the original injury) but they do not trust us and we stopped after feeling it was stressing them out too much trying to catch her.
is it more important to catch her and tend to the wound, or leave her and hope that it stops bleeding and doesn't get infected?
my partner feels that she is losing too much blood, whereas to me it doesn't look like a worrying amount. how much is too much bleeding?
we are thinking of trying to catch her again at dusk when she will be sleepier.
many thanks for your advice.