Lisa,
Her sister died on August 25, at only 17 months old, the day I left on vacation. The temperature was 98 F that day. I was to be gone 12 days and was worried about predators, her going back under the house and being broody and maybe getting roost mites or malnourished, eating bad things out of the neighbor's compost pile, eating too much of the catfood I'd put out for the cats, etc., so I thought she'd be safest in the run). The run is new, and I guess it didn't have enough deep shade. Maybe she had an underlying condition, since her twin sister lived, but I think she died of a heat stroke that afternoon. My neighbor saw her about 5 p.m. that day and thought she didn't look quite right and she was in the same position the next morning, dead. He buried her. I wish I could have done an autopsy. Had I been home that day I would probably have been able to see she didn't feel right and gotten her into the deep shade of the woodpile, and I'll bet she would have survived. It just makes me sick. She did have breast feathers picked out, which I read could be a sign of fatty liver disease, and she was a bit bigger than her surviving sister from the time she was a tiny chick. Her toenails might have been a bit long, which is also a symptom. I thought she had picked out her feathers because she was extremely broody. She did pant harder in hot weather than her surviving sister did. What does it sound like to you that got her? The neighbor said she had her right leg back and her head down kind of to that right side, when he found her dead.
I begged him this morning to let me fence the porch in, but he says he likes to put his cut wood under there to store so it doesn't get wet. I suggested we could put a door in the fencing. He gave me the chickens as a gift. If only I'd opened the door to the coop that day I left on vacation... I was heading to the ocean to cool off, and my poor hen burnt up in the heat, as I see it. I had no idea it was going to get that hot that day. The weather forecasts didn't suggest it would get that hot.
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