Lady Goats
Chirping
Warning: Graphic Image below.
My 1-year old Americauna hasn't been laying since the weather started to warm up in the Sonoran Desert. Other hens are laying regularly. I figured it was heat-stress, and haven't been too concerned until this morning where she had the tell-tale egg-bound stance, and I could feel a large egg near her vent. Oh great.
So my daughter and I brought her in to begin soaking her in warm water/massage/relax regime, but she quickly progressed, and I was able to see a lumpy "egg" trying to get out. At first I felt relief, rubbed some mineral oil all over the place, and let her be.
Went back to check on her, and there was a good amount of blood inside the bath tub. Inspected her vent, and saw that the egg I'd noticed earlier was... well, huge.
I started rubbing it more with mineral oil, and tried to manually extract it. It felt like a lumpy, cooked egg (rubbery). At this point she was dripping blood, her vent was nearly fully prolapsed, and I knew there was no way that egg was coming out whole. I started to dig around at the egg, and sure enough, it came out like a soft-shelled egg, but THERE'S MORE!!
There was a fully formed egg inside of it.
Knowing, still, that this was not going to come out on it's own, I cut a small hole in the inner egg's shell to drain it (want to mention that this egg's shell was extremely thick and hard), and it squirted egg all over the place (collective sound of dread). VERY long story short, I drained the egg, crushed it (which isn't as scary as it sounds, as it was still inside the thick rubbery egg), and pulled it out.
GAG
I rinsed out the area as best I could, tried to gently push the vent back into place (but it isn't staying), and have her back in a warm bath.
I don't have much hope after reading about the egg getting into her vent, but is there anything I can do to raise her chances of survival?
Thanks!
Note: They are free range during the summer months, and have access to layer feed, clean water with electrolytes, shade, and calcium supplements at all times.
My 1-year old Americauna hasn't been laying since the weather started to warm up in the Sonoran Desert. Other hens are laying regularly. I figured it was heat-stress, and haven't been too concerned until this morning where she had the tell-tale egg-bound stance, and I could feel a large egg near her vent. Oh great.
So my daughter and I brought her in to begin soaking her in warm water/massage/relax regime, but she quickly progressed, and I was able to see a lumpy "egg" trying to get out. At first I felt relief, rubbed some mineral oil all over the place, and let her be.
Went back to check on her, and there was a good amount of blood inside the bath tub. Inspected her vent, and saw that the egg I'd noticed earlier was... well, huge.
I started rubbing it more with mineral oil, and tried to manually extract it. It felt like a lumpy, cooked egg (rubbery). At this point she was dripping blood, her vent was nearly fully prolapsed, and I knew there was no way that egg was coming out whole. I started to dig around at the egg, and sure enough, it came out like a soft-shelled egg, but THERE'S MORE!!
There was a fully formed egg inside of it.
Knowing, still, that this was not going to come out on it's own, I cut a small hole in the inner egg's shell to drain it (want to mention that this egg's shell was extremely thick and hard), and it squirted egg all over the place (collective sound of dread). VERY long story short, I drained the egg, crushed it (which isn't as scary as it sounds, as it was still inside the thick rubbery egg), and pulled it out.
GAG
I rinsed out the area as best I could, tried to gently push the vent back into place (but it isn't staying), and have her back in a warm bath.
I don't have much hope after reading about the egg getting into her vent, but is there anything I can do to raise her chances of survival?
Thanks!
Note: They are free range during the summer months, and have access to layer feed, clean water with electrolytes, shade, and calcium supplements at all times.