She could have worms which causes poopy butt too.
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The poop is really clearing up. The first day her poops were runny as can be and the next days smelled fiercely, and the next day, which I believe was yesterday (getting hard to keep up) the poop seemed to be normalizing and not so stinky at all. Has been rather semi-normal poops since. I think the yogurt has helped. Its a curious thing that sudden egg laying and poopy butt occurred at the same time, and perhaps a vent problem that we did not see prior to. This is her poop from this morning:She could have worms which causes poopy butt too.
@casportpony ? very dark?The poop is really clearing up. The first day her poops were runny as can be and the next days smelled fiercely, and the next day, which I believe was yesterday (getting hard to keep up) the poop seemed to be normalizing and not so stinky at all. Has been rather semi-normal poops since. I think the yogurt has helped. Its a curious thing that sudden egg laying and poopy butt occurred at the same time, and perhaps a vent problem that we did not see prior to. This is her poop from this morning:
View attachment 1101233
The yellowish soft scab forming is the tissue reepithelizing (growing back). I don't know much about chickens, but if this was a human you would want to irrigate out the wound with sterile water and hydrogen peroxide and see where the wound goes. If it is just a puncture wound and the swelling is causing the vent to pop out you could either just keep it clean irrigating it 2-3 times a day, or you could pack it with wet to dry dressings changing it once a day. Some ideas for you that we did in cosmetic surgery, I'm sure it would work on a chicken! I hope that she continues on the road to recovery, she seems like a tough girl!No, no poop coming out of that area. Those scalloped edges seem to be the dirty part. When I cleaned it yesterday, I saw some yellowish looking tissue. I thought it was poop, but it's not, so that was another reason I thought to start a/b. After cleaning it looked like a yellowish soft scab forming.
Yes we looked at the vent of another hen and I see pretty much what your picture shows a normal vent. So when I look at her vent I just got so perplexed.
Here is what is curious: before this attack, it was quite wonderful because Olga started laying eggs again after almost a year in September. We couldn't believe it, because we were just talking about it. Was so funny! Thereafter she laid 2 more eggs, and then came the attack : \
As I carried her into the house in the middle of the night and looking her over I noticed she had some clumpy poopy-butt feathers. I asked my daughter if she had been sick? She said no, but she did have some clumpy poopy feathers. It was not bad, I've seen bad poopy butt, but the clumpy feathers were there. So maybe she had something going on from laying eggs again. Maybe it was swollen or prolapsed slightly and that is how the fox got a hold of it. I don't know though, I'm only guessing. Suddenly laying eggs, slight poopy butt, maybe a swollen vent, and she also had very runny poop after the attack, smelled really foul, and now that she is being cared for indoor and she's getting yogurt, her poops have stiffened up. It could all be coincidental that she had something going on just before the attack. Ah, I'll never really know.
Thank you for your help!
So glad to hear it's not bone, that's really good news. Again, I am not a chicken anatomy expert, could be a slight tear and /or prolaps, hopefully someone who is better able to identify it will chime in. For now it sounds like you are doing everything you can and it seems to be working. I am very impressed with your hard work, give yourself a pat on the back. Just keep her vent as clean as you can. Love the urine spray!! Let that bad thing know who's territory it's dealing with and be prepared to get rid of it. Kisses to Olga, she seems to be a fighter and a tough girl. Good for her. and please keep us up dated, I truely do want to know how she is doing. Thoughts and prayers your way everyday
The yellowish soft scab forming is the tissue reepithelizing (growing back). I don't know much about chickens, but if this was a human you would want to irrigate out the wound with sterile water and hydrogen peroxide and see where the wound goes. If it is just a puncture wound and the swelling is causing the vent to pop out you could either just keep it clean irrigating it 2-3 times a day, or you could pack it with wet to dry dressings changing it once a day. Some ideas for you that we did in cosmetic surgery, I'm sure it would work on a chicken! I hope that she continues on the road to recovery, she seems like a tough girl!