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Fading feathers... help

starystoryteller

Chirping
Jun 6, 2021
47
78
96
I have a bird with feather issues. She is otherwise healthy and broody. But she is on a skeleton crew for wing feathers and has been since Christmas. No mites or worms. Loves eating earthworms, flying bugs, and my comfrey in addition to her layerpellets and scratch grains

Help my broody little lady please
 

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It’s normal for them to start looking bad when they are broody but that it excessive! Don’t give any scratch grains if it’s summer where you are, she doesn’t need the carbs. Feathers are made of protein so I’d try her on a chick or All Flock food that has higher protein.

How long has she been broody? If she’s straining her body by being broody for a long time and there no hope of chicks you have to break her brood for her own well-being.
 
That looks like depluming mites damage. Depluming mites are too small to see with the naked eye, and they burrow deep into the feather shaft where typical powders and dusts used to treat mites and lice can't reach them. Topical ivermectin is the treatment most commonly used to treat for depluming mites. Below is an article that shows depluming mites damage that looks very similiar to your hen.
https://poultrykeeper.com/external-problems/depluming-mites/
 
Its been off and on since March but seriously settling in over the last week or two where my fluffy cooing foot warmer turns into an angry feathery porcupine. The last two days she refuses to leave the nest box, mimics a hot water bottle dropping on my hand when I go for eggs, and turns into an angry porcupine for hours if I dislodge her...which I do four or five times a day.

She calms down if I pick her up and hold her ....but anything less than 5 min and she is right back to sea urchin of the land.

Ivermectin topically? Please discribe.
 
It’s normal for them to start looking bad when they are broody but that it excessive! Don’t give any scratch grains if it’s summer where you are, she doesn’t need the carbs. Feathers are made of protein so I’d try her on a chick or All Flock food that has higher protein.

How long has she been broody? If she’s straining her body by being broody for a long time and there no hope of chicks you have to break her brood for her own well-being.
Sorry for the late reply. She was place in broody prison (a 4x10 chicken tractor with good visibility on most sides, built in water and food dispensors, decent shade and a sheltered end for protection from most storms) for one week to break the broody. I dosed her with ivermectin in case of mites... it seemed to loosen feathers as well. The loose feathers acted like slivers and irritated her skin but she refused to groom. At this point I realized her other flock mates had already had a molt or two and she had never done so based on the peck-no-more stains I had placed nearly 2 years ago. So I decided to stroke her and remove as many loose feathers as possible.....many fell out but she enjoyed the setting and she kept coming back. A week later I checked again, she was covered in pinfeathers eveywhere I had "plucked" and the skin where I had not was an angry red color and she was not walking comfortably. So I made the decision to pluck out the most scraggly looking feathers that looked like she had been trying to remove by holding back the skin at the base and pulling the feathers gently ....most came out without effort and she didnt make a sound but I kept supporting the skin at the base to be sure. A few of her flight feathers had something black at the base which didn't look healthy and seemed to be hollowing them out and letting the shaft crack so I removed them which wasn't pleasant but they came out with minimal force and no bleeding....she is healthier without that. I waited another week to repeat since she can only take so much per sitting. Her tail feathers were addressed as well.

It sounds cruel but she will have a warm feather coat by winter
 
She is rehabbing nicely. The new flight feathers ar about an inch long. Working on rebuilding the trust but getting there
 

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