It's been a while since I've been on here, but I've just lost more than half my flock and I don't know why. This is my fifth year with chickens, but it's by far the most difficult.
I had 33 chicks (27 CX and six Leghorns) that will be four weeks old tomorrow. No other birds. My last adults were killed by foxes and a local dog this spring. I have them in a very secure Woods coop with a solar-activated door.
The solar door closed at 8:42 pm last night. I then opened the big door and counted 33 chicks. Going by that time, it should have opened about 6:00 this morning.
When I got out to the yard about 7:30, I had eleven birds in the coop. After searching, I now have fifteen birds. One Leghorn is looking like she won't make it, so probably fourteen. I found two dead CX in the barnyard, widely separated and not eaten. I also found a Leghorn I thought was dead, but is barely alive. I found three live CX who had gotten out of the barnyard entirely, wandering around. I got them back in with the others, and then found one more CX dead in the grass forty yards from the barnyard.
I've searched to about a hundred yards from the coop and found no others. I did not find any plucking sites, and the only few feathers were inside the barnyard. There were no clumps of feathers like you'd get from a four-legged kill.
Until this morning, the chicks have stayed pretty close to the coop, and none of them have ever tried to get out of the barnyard.
Two of the three dead CX showed signs of a bird strike, but were not eaten. One of the CX shows no trauma at all. The nearly-dead Leghorn shows no trauma at all.
My best guess is moldy food, but I'd like to hear from the experienced ones in here.
I've been feeding them layer crumble and mini-pellets, after going through a 50lb bag of chick starter. They've been much preferring the crumble to the pellets, but this morning the crumble was down to nothing. The pellets look fine, but as a guess, they've been eating only the crumble. When they ran out of that, they OD'd on whatever was in the mini-pellets.
I've removed the pellets and refilled the crumble, and most of the remainder are eating the crumble.
The pellets don't look bad by looking at them.
So my questions for the group are:
1. Does this seem like moldy food to you, or could there be another cause?
2. How far would poisoned chicks be likely to run? I'm puzzled that I'm still missing fifteen birds entirely.
3. How can you tell when pellets are moldy if they don't look different from fresh pellets?
Thanks very much.
Doozy Wombat
I had 33 chicks (27 CX and six Leghorns) that will be four weeks old tomorrow. No other birds. My last adults were killed by foxes and a local dog this spring. I have them in a very secure Woods coop with a solar-activated door.
The solar door closed at 8:42 pm last night. I then opened the big door and counted 33 chicks. Going by that time, it should have opened about 6:00 this morning.
When I got out to the yard about 7:30, I had eleven birds in the coop. After searching, I now have fifteen birds. One Leghorn is looking like she won't make it, so probably fourteen. I found two dead CX in the barnyard, widely separated and not eaten. I also found a Leghorn I thought was dead, but is barely alive. I found three live CX who had gotten out of the barnyard entirely, wandering around. I got them back in with the others, and then found one more CX dead in the grass forty yards from the barnyard.
I've searched to about a hundred yards from the coop and found no others. I did not find any plucking sites, and the only few feathers were inside the barnyard. There were no clumps of feathers like you'd get from a four-legged kill.
Until this morning, the chicks have stayed pretty close to the coop, and none of them have ever tried to get out of the barnyard.
Two of the three dead CX showed signs of a bird strike, but were not eaten. One of the CX shows no trauma at all. The nearly-dead Leghorn shows no trauma at all.
My best guess is moldy food, but I'd like to hear from the experienced ones in here.
I've been feeding them layer crumble and mini-pellets, after going through a 50lb bag of chick starter. They've been much preferring the crumble to the pellets, but this morning the crumble was down to nothing. The pellets look fine, but as a guess, they've been eating only the crumble. When they ran out of that, they OD'd on whatever was in the mini-pellets.
I've removed the pellets and refilled the crumble, and most of the remainder are eating the crumble.
The pellets don't look bad by looking at them.
So my questions for the group are:
1. Does this seem like moldy food to you, or could there be another cause?
2. How far would poisoned chicks be likely to run? I'm puzzled that I'm still missing fifteen birds entirely.
3. How can you tell when pellets are moldy if they don't look different from fresh pellets?
Thanks very much.
Doozy Wombat