We are first time chicken parents, but my aunt helped us get set up and tips and info, she started her chicks a few weeks before us. I'm on a facebook backyard chicken group and a few people have recommended different things. Online research and picking the brains of people that work at the local farmer stores. Iv had some tell me medicated feed is awesome, and others say its pointless if they had shots. A few people said it wouldn't hurt, so I'm just doing everything I can. I will say this, being a first time chicken mommy I did not know that they were that sick when I got them. The local feed store did not have their chicks in the best brooders. Kinda dirty and was open to big drafts. So 2 out of 3 we got from that store are dead. Just woke up and one was dead. The next day another one, but it was showing signs of weakness, not wanting to eat or drink. My sick chick is fighting, we just gave her more oil water, warm wet paper towel to her vent for a few minuets and then put more coconut oil on it, lady on facebook who has chickens said its okay to keep her vent moist that way. She seems to be perking up some today after eating raw scrabbled egg with apple cider vinegar and electrolytes. Some would give up on her, but these are pets and layers. And she has such a spunky personality now, little girl is tugging on my heart strings. If I have to wash her vent, and apply oil, and feed her oil water a few times a day to help her get over this I will. I just wont get much sleep. I know nothing about reporting sick chicks. I live in California. If she doesn't make it I will send her in I guess. If someone could link me the info that would be great.
This is your poultry lab. Necropsies in California are free. If you contact them they'll give you a shipping label and tell you how to pack the bird.
California
California Animal Health & Food Safety Laboratory
University of California, School of Veterinary Med
620 West Health Science Drive
Davis, California 95616
Phone: 530-752-8709
IAV-A, ASF, CSF, CWD*, FMD, ISA*, ND, PRV*, SCRAPIE, IAV-S*, VHS*
I still don't know what coconut oil given orally would do to help a sick chick.
I know you hear so many things and if nothing else I want you to read this---If you add food other than factory feed to your broodered chicks(not on the ground) You Gotta add Grit---some sand or some kind of grit---or they can not digest some of it---They will die unless they can get enough grit out of the factory feed to live.
I know some chick sellers do not sell healthy chicks, then some buyers have no idea how to brood them. Example I sold 10 to a lady and told her they had to be under heat--about 95 degree's. She called the next day and said they were all dead---I said did you have them under heat? Yes she replied--my house is heated to 72 degree's and I kept them in the house in the bathroom, in the tub??? The 95 degree's went over her head. OK, 72 degree's standing on a metal cold tub----what should she expect----she did not know!! One lady had a 250 watt red heat lamp and said her's died---even looked dried she said----she had it so hot in the whole brooder that they were like in a dehydrator dead and dried up.
A brooder to hot or to cold is a big problem. A brooder that is heated from one end to the other can be a problem.
I wish you luck and hope this chick gets to feeling better.
Referring back to your philosophy (similar to mine) of trying to replicate what a mother hen does. When brooding, a mother hen doesn't heat all the ambient air to 90F.
She provides a warm spot 100F and lots of cool space. So when artificially brooding, we need to provide a warm/hot spot and lots of cool space sot the chicks can find their comfort zone. I started off using the big Ohio brooders that will take care of 100+ chicks. I now brood smaller numbers each month so I use Premier 1 heat plates that are much more energy efficient but they still provide the same conditions.
I once decided to try using a Rubbermaid tub to brood a few chicks. I hung the 250W heat lamp on the side and before I put the chicks in, I put a thermometer in there and it exploded because it was so hot. For the few times I brooded in one of those things since then, I just used a 75W ceramic heat emitter in a droplight.