Has anyone ever seen a lump like this?
I noticed that one hip was more prominent when this bird was little but I didn’t think it was anything serious but now I’m worried by how big it seems to be getting. It’s definitely the source of their wry tail and it does seem to affect how they walk, run, and sit but they don’t mind it being touched so it’s not painful, just awkward. There’s a part of me that’s really concerned it could be something serious and potentially life threatening but a vet visit is around $200 and another 250 for X-rays.
There is a hard lump under the feathers.
This chick was an assisted hatch if that’s relevant (just very late to hatch and I was sleep deprived, probably would have hatched on their own) I have pictures and videos of what I did with the assisted hatch if anyone thinks that could be the cause of the hip issue, I can share more of those.
Another thing about this bird is that they never showed any signs of being a male until very recently, they have three brothers who were very easy to sex very early on, behaviourally and visually, but this one hasn’t shown any secondary sex characteristics until starting to get their adult feathers (small comb, small spur scales, no baby crows). I’ve heard of cases where hens have seemingly transformed into males and it turned out to be because something was messing with their ovaries, I’m worried that it could be a tumour or something messing with the hip and the ovary potentially. If they are a boy then that’s fine, I just want them to be healthy.
This bird’s comb today. 15 weeks old.
Their half brothers (top and bottom) and cousin (middle) from ten days ago with combs visible. They’re all mottled Houdan crosses on their mothers side, the top brother is a Spitzhauben cross and the bottom brother and cousin are Svart Höna crosses.
The bird I’m worried about has a cream Brabanter father, both of their parents were hand raised together so I can directly compare development at different ages.
Dad at 14 weeks
Dad at 19 weeks
What do you guys think?
Side tangent:
I do know of a place where I could get them DNA sexed for $30 and I’m considering that. This is just for my own curiosity because I just can’t seem to explain the male feathers coming in but does anyone know if those DNA tests can see if a bird is a triploid (three sex chromosomes) or a chimera? This particular bird’s mom grew spurs and the mom’s sister acts like a rooster and has even mounted other hens despite both laying fertile eggs. I’ve read that triploids can come from a particular grandparent so I figured it could maybe explain the mom and aunt’s weirdness and the late feather development potentially. Plus if the test comes back saying regular female then there’s definitely something up with those feathers and it could indicate that something is wrong.
I noticed that one hip was more prominent when this bird was little but I didn’t think it was anything serious but now I’m worried by how big it seems to be getting. It’s definitely the source of their wry tail and it does seem to affect how they walk, run, and sit but they don’t mind it being touched so it’s not painful, just awkward. There’s a part of me that’s really concerned it could be something serious and potentially life threatening but a vet visit is around $200 and another 250 for X-rays.
There is a hard lump under the feathers.
This chick was an assisted hatch if that’s relevant (just very late to hatch and I was sleep deprived, probably would have hatched on their own) I have pictures and videos of what I did with the assisted hatch if anyone thinks that could be the cause of the hip issue, I can share more of those.
Another thing about this bird is that they never showed any signs of being a male until very recently, they have three brothers who were very easy to sex very early on, behaviourally and visually, but this one hasn’t shown any secondary sex characteristics until starting to get their adult feathers (small comb, small spur scales, no baby crows). I’ve heard of cases where hens have seemingly transformed into males and it turned out to be because something was messing with their ovaries, I’m worried that it could be a tumour or something messing with the hip and the ovary potentially. If they are a boy then that’s fine, I just want them to be healthy.
This bird’s comb today. 15 weeks old.
Their half brothers (top and bottom) and cousin (middle) from ten days ago with combs visible. They’re all mottled Houdan crosses on their mothers side, the top brother is a Spitzhauben cross and the bottom brother and cousin are Svart Höna crosses.
The bird I’m worried about has a cream Brabanter father, both of their parents were hand raised together so I can directly compare development at different ages.
Dad at 19 weeks
What do you guys think?
Side tangent:
I do know of a place where I could get them DNA sexed for $30 and I’m considering that. This is just for my own curiosity because I just can’t seem to explain the male feathers coming in but does anyone know if those DNA tests can see if a bird is a triploid (three sex chromosomes) or a chimera? This particular bird’s mom grew spurs and the mom’s sister acts like a rooster and has even mounted other hens despite both laying fertile eggs. I’ve read that triploids can come from a particular grandparent so I figured it could maybe explain the mom and aunt’s weirdness and the late feather development potentially. Plus if the test comes back saying regular female then there’s definitely something up with those feathers and it could indicate that something is wrong.
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