I've recently had some mysterious unexplained deaths in the broody house and it's all when the lab is closed of course! The chicks are all fluffy and look happy until they die. No pasty butt or gasping.
Since I had a case of yolk sack infection a while back I'm wondering if this is the same thing. I had a broody sitting on eggs and I put them in the incubator because she hatched some and left the others. They hatched 10 days earlier than the incubator eggs. I cleaned out the shells but the chicks would have crawled all over the other eggs. I'm wondering if this allowed a bacteria to grow that would cause infection. I don't know when I quit being so GREEN and making dumb mistakes. Whenever that happens, I will be very grateful! It would have been far less costly to toss the 3 mutt eggs from under the broody than to lose 9 chicks from specific breeding.
Starting Thursday I've lost 2 a day and I'm not very happy at all! I can't pin point the problem because it doesn't look like anything.Before that it was just one here and there so I didn't really alarm. Losing one or two out of 50 chicks doesn't shake me up - usually they are runts and you know they were going to die anyway. When I start losing one or more a day then I know there is something wrong.![]()
I've two chicks, one of the first and the one from tonight, set aside for UC DAVIS to get Tues.
(Yes, wrapped in napkins, hiding in the fridge in sandwich bags, tucked away so no one opens them.Don't know what else to do).![]()
Is there anything you would do in the meanwhile? If it is yolk sack infection - is this treatable with something I can hunt down and buy on Monday? I'd like to preempt any more losses as 3 of the dead chicks are some of my new Basque flock. They were so happy and chunky. I hate to lose any more!
Get the anti biotic that kills e coli.
I mailed the crop pills on Friday to you.
