Bloody head?

Mrs. K

Crossing the Road
15 Years
Nov 12, 2009
14,666
28,147
896
western South Dakota
Very cold here, and we have been gone. Son caring for flock.

Today when I go down, I see some blood on the bedding below the roosts. Find a chicken with just a bloody head, but not torn or anything, under a bench. Is that a mink? or weasel? no damage to the body. Really not any damage to the head, just blood all around it.

To me the blood beneath the roost suggests it happen while on the roost, but then did she crawl under the bench and die? Generally when I get a predator, I lose more than one bird.

The cold could not make her hemorrhage?

mrs K
 
Very cold here, and we have been gone. Son caring for flock.

Today when I go down, I see some blood on the bedding below the roosts. Find a chicken with just a bloody head, but not torn or anything, under a bench. Is that a mink? or weasel? no damage to the body. Really not any damage to the head, just blood all around it.

To me the blood beneath the roost suggests it happen while on the roost, but then did she crawl under the bench and die? Generally when I get a predator, I lose more than one bird.

The cold could not make her hemorrhage?

mrs K
Sorry. The cold could prevent her from bleeding out. Our neighbors recently lost chickens we think to a bobcat. Very sad.
One chicken was eaten and the other left, but killed. Both were on the roost.
 
Just a single chicken, no feathers all over, other birds not upset. If she did not have blood on her head, I would think that she just froze to death. It is bitter cold here. But ?
 
It sounds to me like the rest of the flock may have attacked her, particularly if she was hiding under a bench. It could be that she had a bit of frostbite, which, when bleeding, can cause others to gang up. I like to treat it with antiseptic spray; we have a coloured one which also has the effect of turning the injury blue, which can help deter pecking.
 

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