Found 2 of my 7 hens dead

PJriffic

In the Brooder
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Hello I live in Texas. Not too cold. I had 7 hens. I have them in a pen that is decently predator proofed. I have a net for air predators, 5ft fences for land predators and their coup has an apron all around it. We do deep cleaning every 2 weeks and daily water and food checks. Their water & food dispenser can sustain them for approximately 2 weeks. I didn't get out to see them for 6 days. We went away on a short trip. Yesterday I went to let them out of their coup to roam the yard and found 2 dead. That is the longest amount of time that I left them unattended. But I can't understand what could have happened. They had plenty of food and water. The other hens looked fine. Should I be worried about the others? I took them to the vet for post mortem analysis but I can't imagine what could have happened. Does anyone have any ideas. Is this unusual? I've had chickens now for 3 years and this has never happened. Any suggestions on what I can do to prevent this from happening again would be greatly appreciated.
 
Could the food have gotten any mold in it with being left out that long or the water algae? Just wondering. I have had my scratch grains get mold in it before when kept in my house and not even outside. This is why I ask. Sorry for your loss.
 
I'd suspect they were attacked if you found 2 dead and don't have a predator proof coop and run (depends on how and where you found them) The industry standard is 1/2" galvanized steel hardware cloth mesh over all opening plus an apron around the bottom.You can't rule out sickness unless you've sent their bodies off for testing. I'm sorry for your loss and hope your chickens are okay.
 
Their water & food dispenser can sustain them for approximately 2 weeks. I didn't get out to see them for 6 days. We went away on a short trip. Yesterday I went to let them out of their coup to roam the yard and found 2 dead. That is the longest amount of time that I left them unattended. But I can't understand what could have happened. They had plenty of food and water.
I took them to the vet for post mortem analysis but I can't imagine what could have happened. Does anyone have any ideas.
I'm sorry for your losses.

There's no way to know what may have happened. It's good that you have taken the steps to have further analysis.

Keep us posted on what you find out from the Results.
 
I hope the post mortem answers questions for you. Predators do notice a reduction in human presence and will get bolder about approaching. If there was any weakness in the fortress, they will find and exploit that given the chance.
 
Were there any signs of injury? Were they in a corner, sprawled out, curled up?

My only advice for next time is to consider a camera like a Ring or something else that lets you look in on them when you are away.
Thanks for the feed back. I'll definetly look into getting a camera for in the coop area and around their pen. But to answer your question, one was in a corner the other was sprawled out covered by the pine shaving bedding. They didn't look like they were injured. It's so strange. The other hens seemed fine. Will let everyone know what post mortem results are when they come back.
 
I hope the post mortem answers questions for you. Predators do notice a reduction in human presence and will get bolder about approaching. If there was any weakness in the fortress, they will find and exploit that given the chance.
Not sure. All the other hens seemed fine. But I'll let everyone know once the tests come back. It's definitely more money than I wanted to pay, but I really want to make sure the other hens don't have any strange illness and I want to make sure our eggs are safe to consume.
 

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