Well, I left work early because I've gone from stuffy head & cough to full on fever & everything else. Came home to my problem child hen, Penelope, needing a major behind soaking.Think I'll take a nap & let the cold medicine start working before I try tackling that. My first time bathing a bird. This should be interesting. Thank goodness I colour my own hair & don't have a shortage of gloves.
Everyone talking about their hatchings & chick orders coming in is making me crawl out of my skin waiting for my chicks/eggs! If I had a serious incubator like everyone else here, I think I'd stop waiting for the eggs my mom ordered me & just start my own flock's eggs now & do a staggered hatching! My broody hen is even more impatient than I am now - I took her off the egg she was sitting on in the barn coop & now she's sitting on the golf ball in the nesting box in their outside run trying to hatch it! I can't wait to get that coop built for them. She can hatch all the chicks she wants after that happens!
Let me know if you need help
Think I'll take a nap & let the cold medicine start working before I try tackling that. My first time bathing a bird. This should be interesting. Thank goodness I colour my own hair & don't have a shortage of gloves.

First don't beat yourself up I wonder if Odys comb was really from frostbite? It would have been dis colored or blackish at the top? If so then it was more than likely frostbite, they bleed a lot from their combs and wattles. I saw Rocco had some on a one of the tips of his comb and he had bleed onto the back of his head some. These things happen with chickens/livestock, they are very resilient and he shouldn't skip a beat if it was small portion of the comb. Just watch for infection, you can put Bag Balm on it for a soothing effect and as a preventative in the future when it is suppose to be cold. You are doing great, you will probably figure out hatching before me! Dont worry, I know how that goes, I was a nervous wreck back in November when we got that first cold snap. We had a girl get frost bite, then a month or so later the roo's and two hens got frostbite from drinking out of the heated water bowls. Then finally a month later our roo's almost killed each other and this was their first fight. The only way to learn is by continuing what you are doing, reading/researching everything you can about chickens and asking questions here. The instincts are there, obviously you love animals, experience comes with practice and that takes time. I don't know where I would be as a chicken keeper if I wasn't involved with BYC.
