Sorry in advance that this is practically a novel.
Guys, my girls aren't eating their feed. Or not much of it, anyway. Since Bianca(Leghorn) died (longish story, will explain below) my remaining three girls seem to only be eating about a third of what I put out there every morning, which is approximately a cup and a half of food. When Bianca was out there, I was putting out two cups a day and it was always all gone by nightfall. Surely one hen wasn’t eating 14 ounces of feed a day by herself, in addition to all the greens, grass, weeds, and bugs I give them! (Before anyone asks, I’ve tried free-feeding from three different kinds of feeder, but the feed always rots in the container thanks to the humidity. I have to put food out daily for them.)
Rosie(RIR) and Matilda(Australorp) are laying every day to every other day. Sophie(EE)asn’t laid in two weeks (will also explain below). Bianca died one week ago. I’m still giving them the usual amount of everything they were getting before. Nobody appears to be ill or injured, their behavior appears normal. They rush me for produce and greens and will gobble them up in a second like they always did before, but their feed d
Right, dead chicken. Bianca was in confinement inside due to bullying. I was working on an outdoor confinement coop and one day while I was working on it my four-year-old went inside and figured out how to climb the baby gate in the hall and unlock my bedroom door, and she got into my bathroom and let the chicken out. I found the bird in the hallway paralyzed and panting when I went inside, and one of the dogs jumping back and forth over the gate. I put the bird back in the bathroom so she could have quiet to recover, but she didn't make it. I didn't see any injuries and she hadn't been ill before confinement, so I suspect the dog gave her a heart attack. That was last Friday.
Also non-laying hen. I suspect aftereffects from stress. Two weeks ago, or so, Bianca had pecked Sophie and Matilda both, and there was some playing musical chicken while I figured out how to simultaneously confine the bully, convalesce the injured birds away from the remaining non-injured one, and prep the brooder for the arrival of a new batch of babies just days after that incident. During all this, Sophie's foot developed bumblefoot and that required surgery and convalescence for a few more days. Now the flock is down a hen, and I'm sure that's just piling on the stress.
Guys, my girls aren't eating their feed. Or not much of it, anyway. Since Bianca(Leghorn) died (longish story, will explain below) my remaining three girls seem to only be eating about a third of what I put out there every morning, which is approximately a cup and a half of food. When Bianca was out there, I was putting out two cups a day and it was always all gone by nightfall. Surely one hen wasn’t eating 14 ounces of feed a day by herself, in addition to all the greens, grass, weeds, and bugs I give them! (Before anyone asks, I’ve tried free-feeding from three different kinds of feeder, but the feed always rots in the container thanks to the humidity. I have to put food out daily for them.)
Rosie(RIR) and Matilda(Australorp) are laying every day to every other day. Sophie(EE)asn’t laid in two weeks (will also explain below). Bianca died one week ago. I’m still giving them the usual amount of everything they were getting before. Nobody appears to be ill or injured, their behavior appears normal. They rush me for produce and greens and will gobble them up in a second like they always did before, but their feed d
Right, dead chicken. Bianca was in confinement inside due to bullying. I was working on an outdoor confinement coop and one day while I was working on it my four-year-old went inside and figured out how to climb the baby gate in the hall and unlock my bedroom door, and she got into my bathroom and let the chicken out. I found the bird in the hallway paralyzed and panting when I went inside, and one of the dogs jumping back and forth over the gate. I put the bird back in the bathroom so she could have quiet to recover, but she didn't make it. I didn't see any injuries and she hadn't been ill before confinement, so I suspect the dog gave her a heart attack. That was last Friday.
Also non-laying hen. I suspect aftereffects from stress. Two weeks ago, or so, Bianca had pecked Sophie and Matilda both, and there was some playing musical chicken while I figured out how to simultaneously confine the bully, convalesce the injured birds away from the remaining non-injured one, and prep the brooder for the arrival of a new batch of babies just days after that incident. During all this, Sophie's foot developed bumblefoot and that required surgery and convalescence for a few more days. Now the flock is down a hen, and I'm sure that's just piling on the stress.
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