Depressed chicken

ChickenAire

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Corrales, New Mexico
We are new to chickens and have 10 girls, aged 5 weeks to almost 3 months. All of our chicks were purchased as 1-day old chicks from the local feed store. As far as I can tell, we do not have a rooster.

We have a Speckled Sussex, a Cuckoo Maran, 3 Wyandotte's, 2 Russian Orloffs, a Buckeye, an Australorp, and an Ameraucana. We live on an acre and have 4 Airedales, who are not permitted in the orchard where we built our pen. As the girls have gotten older I have been moving them outside (in groups of 3 or 4) into their coop and pen. They now have plenty of room and since the weather has warmed up, they are pretty happy with their new home.

However, we do have a serious problem. Our Speckled Sussex, Violet, is the oldest and was the self-appointed head of the group, but her "welcome" to younger chicks was less than welcoming. After she nearly scalped the Cuckoo Maran, I took Violet out of the coop for a couple of hours. When I put her back, it was obvious that the Golden Wyandotte had taken over command duties. Violet went into the corner and over a couple of days I noticed she was isolating herself from everyone else. When I went to pick her up, it was clear she had lost a lot of weight.

I put Violet in our lawn wagon, which has mesh sides and is about 2' x 5', and placed the wagon next to the coop so that Violet can see and hear the other chicks and they can see and hear her. She has her own food and water and aspen shavings for a bed. I can sit on a bale of straw next to the wagon and rub Violet's head and talk to her, and as long as I am there, she eats and drinks. She perks up noticeably when I am near her. She also pays attention to the noises and activities of the other chicks.

It is obvious that Violet had been depressed and simply quit eating. If I had not removed her from the group and begun to feed her and care for her, she would have died several days ago. She is slowly getting her strength back, but is not walking around yet. She scoots around the wagon. Her toes are curled, but I straighten them every time I go out to see her--at least 4 or more times a day--and make her balance on her legs while she eats and drinks. I hope to put her back with the group when she is stronger but am worried about integrating her back into the group.

I know chickens are very social and I also know that Violet seems to have lost her sense of self when I took her from the coop. I blame myself for causing all her grief, but my question is, what do I do now? I was even thinking about getting a couple of chicks to place in the wagon with her, so that she wouldn't be alone and she would bond with them, but truthfully, my husband thinks 10 is plenty.

Any advice/
 
Sounds like perhaps something else might be going on but I don't know what.

As for integration. They will fight and they will need to establish their pecking order. In the future, if you can try to let them see each other, and range together without sharing coop space for a few weeks, that will make the move to sharing the same sleeping area much better. Similar sized birds when integrated can also help, as can the presence of a mature sound minded rooster who will keep the hens in line. Girls are vicious, but unless there is open wound and bleeding from places not including the face and wattles, let them fight it out.

That said, I really hope your girl can recover. Perhaps picking a buddy out from the rest to house with her may help for when it is time to put her with the rest again so two can share in the misery of re-joining the flock. Being kicked and removed from top can be a pretty harsh thing for a bird. I had an old rooster who lost his post of many years to a son and he lost his will to live in his old age. Your girl is young though and was probably just chased from food. Extra feed stations and TLC when she's back will help.
 
Greetings from Kansas, Chickenaire, and
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! Great to have you with us! I'm not sure what going on with Violet but I don't think simply removing her from the coop for a couple of hours knocked her to the bottom of the pecking order - as silkiechicken stated above - there has to be something else happening but I'm stumped as well. Glad you are nursing her back to health. Maybe it was just an odd set of unknown coincidences that caused her to lose weight and she'll be back to normal soon. Good luck to you!
 
Welcome to BYC!!!
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Glad to have you aboard!!
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I was thinking the same thing, two hours away wouldn't have lowered the pecking order. Usually when a bird is removed from the flock(behavior reasons) they are kept in 'time out' for a few days. Maybe you could post in 'chicken behaviors,' and see what others come up with. Maybe she was being bullied away from the feed and upset enough to take it out on the younger chick.

Is it possible you could bring her in the house for a couple days to see if she perks up because she is away from the others. Some chickens do prefer the company of people to that of the flock, and end up being great housechickens.
 
It sounds like curly toe paralysis to me.

Here:
http://www.thepoultrysite.com/publications/6/diseases-of-poultry/217/vitamin-b2-deficiency

I'd give her some vitamins and reintegrate her as soon as you can when she starts walking again if it were me. There is a poultry pack of vitamins the feed stores sell for poultry, and other people use baby vitamins poly vi sol without iron for their chickens.

When she was in the corner not eating and drinking, losing weight, I would have said maybe it is coccidiosis if you also saw some diarrhea or bloody poos (which you didn't mention). It is possible there was some underlying health issue or internal problem. However, since she is perking up and eating and drinking, I'd just get some vitamins into her ASAP!

I hope she can fully recover. She isn't destined to be a bully from my experience- when younger chicks are combined with older ones things can get messy...hopefully she will be a sweet hen one day for you, fully recovered and friendly.

I agree with silkiechicken in that giving her a friend would be an excellent idea.

Keep in mind that I am not sure what is wrong, but this is what I'd do if it were my chicken.

http://www.merckmanuals.com/vet/pou..._poultry/vitamin_deficiencies_in_poultry.html
riboflavin

You might give some yogurt if you don't have vitamins on hand, as dairy products have riboflavin, or some scrambled eggs.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoghurt
 
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