- Jan 25, 2013
- 1,698
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- 286
Thank you for the great reviewsBut I heartily recommend either the Foy's or the ADOR1 units.
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Thank you for the great reviewsBut I heartily recommend either the Foy's or the ADOR1 units.
This is way off the subject but we are having a central valley panic over hear. Wondering if anyone is awake and can offer advise.
We have a 9 month old, organically fed (Modesto Milling), free-range Buff Orpington with what appears to be a prolapse. Read the forum and the chicken chick. Gave her a really warm bath and when we got her out, the prolapsed area had disappeared. Her vent was still contracting so I don't know how long that will last. Went ahead and put honey around her vent as some said it helped reduce swelling. I did put a small amount of hibi-cleanse in the bath water. She is now in a box near the broody box so she can share the heat lamp.
Her lower feathers were dripping wet - that's what made me notice her in the first place. The prolapsed area was only about as big as my thumb from the knuckle out.![]()
How do I know the difference between prolapse and a stuck egg? I did see her poop recently. Will a stuck egg prevent elimination?
I read all about the calcium deficiency problems with uterine contracting. That made sense to me (a student midwife) so I put after-birth tea in her water (helps a woman's uterus contract properly and is high in calcium from raspberry leaf) along with vitamin/mineral pack, apple cider vinegar and probiotics.
It's hard for me to imagine how she got a calcium deficiency since her food is such a high quality and we supplement with oyster shells.
What should I do now? I'm sure there is a different treatment for prolapse vs egg bound.
Thoughts, tips anyone? We really like our Orpingtons and hate to see her die so young.
It's too late for me to call anyone locally and we are not inclined to spend a lot of money on vet visits if this is going to be a recurring problem. We will just cull her from the flock if we have to. It's just not our first choice. We'd like to help her heal and have a happy egg-laying life!
I'm afraid to open her box and wake her up to check on her but I feel like the obsessed caregiver just now and really want to see if that thing fell back out.
Quote: Yes, that's normal. She's in position to lift herself up when needed so she doesn't smother the chicks as they hatch.
I've never had to deal with a prolapse myself, but I've read that some use Preparation H to help it retract. You want to keep her in the dark as much as possible to reduce the possibility of her laying an egg so soon. From what I've read, they can heal/recover from it.This is way off the subject but we are having a central valley panic over hear. Wondering if anyone is awake and can offer advise.
We have a 9 month old, organically fed (Modesto Milling), free-range Buff Orpington with what appears to be a prolapse. Read the forum and the chicken chick. Gave her a really warm bath and when we got her out, the prolapsed area had disappeared. Her vent was still contracting so I don't know how long that will last. Went ahead and put honey around her vent as some said it helped reduce swelling. I did put a small amount of hibi-cleanse in the bath water. She is now in a box near the broody box so she can share the heat lamp.
Her lower feathers were dripping wet - that's what made me notice her in the first place. The prolapsed area was only about as big as my thumb from the knuckle out.![]()
How do I know the difference between prolapse and a stuck egg? I did see her poop recently. Will a stuck egg prevent elimination?
I read all about the calcium deficiency problems with uterine contracting. That made sense to me (a student midwife) so I put after-birth tea in her water (helps a woman's uterus contract properly and is high in calcium from raspberry leaf) along with vitamin/mineral pack, apple cider vinegar and probiotics.
It's hard for me to imagine how she got a calcium deficiency since her food is such a high quality and we supplement with oyster shells.
What should I do now? I'm sure there is a different treatment for prolapse vs egg bound.
Thoughts, tips anyone? We really like our Orpingtons and hate to see her die so young.
It's too late for me to call anyone locally and we are not inclined to spend a lot of money on vet visits if this is going to be a recurring problem. We will just cull her from the flock if we have to. It's just not our first choice. We'd like to help her heal and have a happy egg-laying life!
I'm afraid to open her box and wake her up to check on her but I feel like the obsessed caregiver just now and really want to see if that thing fell back out.
As for egg bound, the symptoms of that would be walking like a penguin and no, she would not be able to eliminate waste, which is why it turns fatal so quickly. I don't think your girl is eggbound from what you are describing.
The wetness on her, could it have been a broken egg? Any smell associated with it?
We had the exact same problem last week,sans wet butt.This is way off the subject but we are having a central valley panic over hear. Wondering if anyone is awake and can offer advise.
We have a 9 month old, organically fed (Modesto Milling), free-range Buff Orpington with what appears to be a prolapse. Read the forum and the chicken chick. Gave her a really warm bath and when we got her out, the prolapsed area had disappeared. Her vent was still contracting so I don't know how long that will last. Went ahead and put honey around her vent as some said it helped reduce swelling. I did put a small amount of hibi-cleanse in the bath water. She is now in a box near the broody box so she can share the heat lamp.
Her lower feathers were dripping wet - that's what made me notice her in the first place. The prolapsed area was only about as big as my thumb from the knuckle out.![]()
How do I know the difference between prolapse and a stuck egg? I did see her poop recently. Will a stuck egg prevent elimination?
I read all about the calcium deficiency problems with uterine contracting. That made sense to me (a student midwife) so I put after-birth tea in her water (helps a woman's uterus contract properly and is high in calcium from raspberry leaf) along with vitamin/mineral pack, apple cider vinegar and probiotics.
It's hard for me to imagine how she got a calcium deficiency since her food is such a high quality and we supplement with oyster shells.
What should I do now? I'm sure there is a different treatment for prolapse vs egg bound.
Thoughts, tips anyone? We really like our Orpingtons and hate to see her die so young.
It's too late for me to call anyone locally and we are not inclined to spend a lot of money on vet visits if this is going to be a recurring problem. We will just cull her from the flock if we have to. It's just not our first choice. We'd like to help her heal and have a happy egg-laying life!
I'm afraid to open her box and wake her up to check on her but I feel like the obsessed caregiver just now and really want to see if that thing fell back out.