Let the baby rest for a few hours. The green sounds like a bowel movement the vent is right above where the sack is. Hatching is hard work and some just need more time to recover.
I had one hatch with the yolk sac exactly like that. It won't absorb. The yolk sac is completely external, there's no way for the chick to absorb it. I wrapped the whole thing, chick and yolk, in a wash cloth and tucked it into a coffee mug in the brooder. The mug immobilized it and protected it from the other chicks while the umbilicus dried. The yolk sac burst and I was able to cut the whole mess off the chick because the cord was dry by then. I tucked it back into the mug to rest and an hour later I looked in there and the chick was standing beside the mug. She was a skinny little thing because she hadn't absorbed the yolk, but she did just fine. She's out in the run right now, you'd never know she had a problem when she hatched.
I wrapped her back up in a clean cloth to make her feel secure and keep her warm. She struggled and chirped while I was taking care of her, then she napped and climbed out of the mug by herself. (startled me quite a bit when I looked in there)
I'm afraid the eyes still being closed isn't a good sign, though. In my experience those slowly fade away. I had my only Salmon Faverolle do that last night, I'm still very upset over it. I'm sorry, but you should prepare yourself.
Thank you, I'm more upset about that loss than any I've had yet. I hope your little baby makes it. Keep it warm and wrapped up and dip the tip of it's beak in some multi-vitamin supplement if you have it.
Quote:
Thank you, I'm more upset about that loss than any I've had yet. I hope your little baby makes it. Keep it warm and wrapped up and dip the tip of it's beak in some multi-vitamin supplement if you have it.