I was not sure where to put this post - and so this seemed the best place. Not sure of even the response I expect, but a conversation about it would help.
A week or so ago, I found one of my girls was sick, very sick. She somehow got injured, and was infested with maggots. I had to put her down within hours of finding out - it was labor day and no vets were open that we could travel to, so my husband managed to do it, I tried, but could not.
Every time I think about eating eggs right now turns my stomach. I was hesitant to feed my dogs a hard boiled egg today because I could not determine if the smell was 'bad' meaning the egg was actually bad or was it just from what I had gone through, and the smell that accompanied that event.
I'm conflicted and considering trashing all the eggs I currently have, afraid they are from this sick chicken and somehow affected by what happened to her.
This is my first flock, and they are less than a year old. This is the first one I have lost (other than a chick the day after they arrived). And certainly the first animal we have had to 'take care of' in this way.
I am struggling with this - and wondering wth I was thinking getting chickens...
Anyone else have an issue like this, did you get over it?
Thanks for reading...
A week or so ago, I found one of my girls was sick, very sick. She somehow got injured, and was infested with maggots. I had to put her down within hours of finding out - it was labor day and no vets were open that we could travel to, so my husband managed to do it, I tried, but could not.
Every time I think about eating eggs right now turns my stomach. I was hesitant to feed my dogs a hard boiled egg today because I could not determine if the smell was 'bad' meaning the egg was actually bad or was it just from what I had gone through, and the smell that accompanied that event.
I'm conflicted and considering trashing all the eggs I currently have, afraid they are from this sick chicken and somehow affected by what happened to her.
This is my first flock, and they are less than a year old. This is the first one I have lost (other than a chick the day after they arrived). And certainly the first animal we have had to 'take care of' in this way.
I am struggling with this - and wondering wth I was thinking getting chickens...
Anyone else have an issue like this, did you get over it?
Thanks for reading...
I had a hen get flystrike due to some internal stuff she was dealing with, and I had to put her down myself, which was extremely hard for me to do. She was separated from my main flock, though she was staying in a coop with my broody bantam at the time I discovered her flystrike. (The bantam had gone broody behind a cage, so there was nothing getting to her, not even me.) I never stopped eating any of the eggs around that time, and nobody got sick. (The broody also hatched healthy chicks.) The only time I suggest throwing out eggs are cracked ones, old ones, ones that had been on the floor that could be old or spoiled, eggs that had been sitting in the heat for too long, or the eggs of chickens being dewormed. When I crack open an egg, if it doesn't look right, I typically throw it out. When I get a cracked egg from my coop, I often feed it raw to my dog who loves it and doesn't get sick (he has a sensitive stomach, so if he's not getting sick, then that is good).
I grew up with small animals, and in many cases learned how to butcher them before I ever learned how to care for them. We had no vets to consult, so we had to learn to care for our animals at home, the best we could, but also were taught when to put a sick or injured animal down and prevent it from suffering. With my background, I have no problem with culling animals for their sake, and the health of the remaining animals.
