I will tackle some of your questions that I feel I know the answer to.
Old epsom salts should be fine. It is just a mineral (magnesium sulphate). Check you didn’t get some fancy stuff with weird extras added in that might be an issue.
Yes just soaking is OK - sometimes even for bad cases. You could skip bandaging until you are back.
The key is repeated soaking to soften everything up. As often as you can for as long as you can.
While your partner is in town make sure he gets something that can create the ring to take the pressure off the bumble once you start bandaging. @bgmathteach uses corn rings from the foot care part of the pharmacy. That foam that is used to insulate plumbing pipes is also good (you cut off slices).
Also he should get whatever drawing salve is available in France. The gold standard would be anything containing ichthammol.
And lots of vetwrap bandage because it sticks to itself.
:goodpost:

@ManueB I can add that bumblefoot, from what I have read and from others experience or suspicions is that common causes are repeated landings on a hard surface, like a concrete coop floor (I picture it as the foot hitting a tiny pebble or rock, but it doesn’t give because the surface beneath is hard so the flesh is injured, it but it might be a repeated bruising that goes bad internally). Or something sharp cutting or puncturing the foot like what you are fearing, sharp edges, but it can be splinters or thorns (wild roses or brambles in the case of @Kris5902). Do you see your birds using the ramp or jumping right off?

Some people use a series of small steps instead, as you suggest. I’d use at least two with the height you have.

If you are concerned about the screws on the ramp steps, since they aren’t countersunk deeply, maybe that could be a cause. Do the screws go through all the wood and stick out the other side? If not, remove them, and screw them back in to the steps from the back side. That way there’ll be no heads on the upper side.

Before you do that though, either sand and smooth all the corner edges, or get wood lengths that are easier to smooth. Young tree branches might work (the smooth lengths between branching), or if you can buy a split dowel, that would be great because it’s a half-round shape and will sit flush on the ramp.
 
It is pouring rain, has been all morning. Branch has already made sure he is soaking wet doing rooster things this morning. I do not care, I need to bring my therapy chicken inside for a bit.

I am just going to leave this here.

It takes a special kind of person to wait until Rosie is ready to go out the door and wait for the bus on picture day to inform her that her new haircut looks terrible. Instant meltdown from Rosie and I let grandma have it with both barrels. Thankfully the bus was late so I was able to calm Rosie down and not have her get on the bus in tears. The 2nd day back to school and she has started the same crap again.
I’m sorry :hugs The heart was for Rosie and you and your mom. I’m going to put out there that Grandma does it because of separation and change anxiety. Not excusing it by itself, but her dementia makes her a toddler this way. The hard thing is our elders are armed with bigger guns than toddlers have and can do more damage.
 
Yeah, quite a lot of pink. Here's another view.View attachment 3605647

I talked about the puppy pile these crazy birds do at night. Here's tonight. View attachment 3605648View attachment 3605649
Brave Manny on the bottom, hens on top. Every single night. Is this normal? :idunno I don't know when they move up to the roost...but eventually they do. Weirdo chickens.:lol:
Since you confirmed the pink, then I would say yes that is likely a rooster in the making with fair bit of certainty.

My dotty crew pile until the bigs roost then they go up so maybe it could be a roosting order issue and this is part of how they handle that. Alternatively, I notice the food and water is where they pile perhaps your Roo is seeing if anyone needs to top off before they head up? Just floating a couple of theorys.
 
You are not the first to question Sylvie’s gender. The crowing is only now and then. Not every day. So I am thinking it is more likely a hen getting excited about something.
But any excuse to post pictures of the lovely Sylvie and if you do think she is a boy, please break it to me gently!

I have noticed that Bernie is much more aggressive to Sylvie than she is to any of the others. She really doesn’t like her (him?).
View attachment 3604947View attachment 3604948View attachment 3604949View attachment 3604950View attachment 3604951View attachment 3604952
I know little but I’m saying not a boy. Reasons - because the neck feathers are only pointy in the markings, the actual feathers are rounded, and the saddle feathers are definitely rounded. Is this valid?
 
Since you confirmed the pink, then I would say yes that is likely a rooster in the making with fair bit of certainty.

My dotty crew pile until the bigs roost then they go up so maybe it could be a roosting order issue and this is part of how they handle that. Alternatively, I notice the food and water is where they pile perhaps your Roo is seeing if anyone needs to top off before they head up? Just floating a couple of theorys.

I think the food or water is incidental. They like corners. They did the corner beside the feeders until I changed that wall to wire. After a couple days they moved to the back corner under the roosts, but I put a box there for the triplets to hide under yesterday. So, now they're by the waterer.
 
They were part of the landscape when we bought the place. I keep seeing similar ones on the mountain sides. They're fantastic for beak and nail scraping...not to mention escaping hormonal idiots. I toss scratch on them to encourage spending time on them. If you pursue getting some, you're going to need help getting, hauling, unloading, and positioning them. Alternatively, get a hold of a landscaper and see what they have.
Plenty of large boulders here, the farmers haul them out of their fields in the spring thaw - I can just ask them to bring down a couple in the front end loader.

Like me the idea of sharpening beaks, they need sharper beaks…. 😆
 
Teaching the hooligans to roost in the coop on their own is not going well. This right here is part of the problem, but, neither of us would have it any other way. As grandma's health declines the one constant she has that she still gets enjoyment out of is the chickens and "Her babies".
View attachment 3604586View attachment 3604587View attachment 3604588View attachment 3604590View attachment 3604592View attachment 3604593View attachment 3604594View attachment 3604595View attachment 3604596View attachment 3604597View attachment 3604598View attachment 3604599View attachment 3604600View attachment 3604601View attachment 3604602View attachment 3604603View attachment 3604604View attachment 3604605
Grandma and Mom have also changed owly's name to Aunt Olive because of her green legs. In honor of grandma's Aunt Olive who was supposedly the nicest lady she knew. Yeah, call her what you want, to me she is Owly.
Great closeups on the hawk you have tamed! Only is very cool. What are the tufts of feathers over her nares called? A mustache, to go with her beard?
 
It's always bedtime shenanigans here also, not as bad as when I had the multi level roosting rails, but still they all want those coveted locations on the ledge and not next to whomever they don't want to be next to... The only ones that have a constant are Penelope, Blanche and Sophia, since she weaned her babies she is back with her sisters.

Her babies try to roost with her still but she keeps pecking them away, poor babies. I tried to give them suggestions but last night I got fed up, my eye was stabbing pain and I couldn't see so I said figure it out yourselves kiddos.

In the Summer House portion where I keep the older chicks it's also mayhem. I put screening up to keep Rico from flying into the other side of the enclosure, to have some semblance of quarantine (though Fluffy once again foiled that). But those chicks are scrambling around up and down off the ledge vying for the best location.

In the other side with the 3 Azures I have some 4x4 posts I put on over turned pails and the large crate for them to roost on. And where does Turvy want to sit? right on top of my small camera I have set up in there on a step stool - she balanced herself on that camera hahahaha. I went and turned it via the remote control and she was turning around and figured hey I am out of here! They finally settled for one of the 4x4s I have over the bottom half of the large crate.
I can't imagine why there would be mites on the roosts, as opposed to in the litter. But literally, they've always done this! I got them at about 6 weeks old and they were in the small coop. It had a tiny roost, maybe 6" of the floor, because it's quite low, maybe 2' tall. But I never saw them on it. When it was dusk they'd puppy pile in the corner of the run, but would eventually go in the coop.

When we moved them in the big coop they continued this behavior. I didn't see them on a roost for a solid month. But they are usually up on the roosts in the morning, if we get out there early enough.

I keep telling you guys I have weird chickens. :gig
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom