i have a silkie hen who needs help asap. about a mth ago when our temps dropped to freezeing we had to bring waters home to unthaw them as they where solid ice.(i raise my flock outside of town at a friends house). we put in pans of water for them so they had fresh water till we could get the gal self waterers all unthawed and back to them the next day.
temp dropped worse. the hen decided to bath in the pan of water and stayed in to long and got stuck and the next day when the roads cleared we could get off our hill again to take the waters back to them we found the hen frozen in her coop in the pan of water. her feet where froze to a block of ice i had to break her free of. we warmed her and dried her and she spent the night at home with us but apparently we where to late she had been in it too long in to cold of weather. she did fine the next day but wabbled a little the first few hours since we kept her off her feet as much as possible. she was lonely without her coop mates so we took her back over, after that she was fine till today no signs of anything till now we have been keeping an eye on her.
today when we went to feed and water everyone again we noticed her limping. we checked her feet and some parts are solid/hard feeling like freezedried and very dry looking as if she has frostbite and they are dieing. they are not black that we can tell but she is a silkie so that's hard to tell but i asume it is the start of them to die off. she doesn't look to have surface frostbite or anything like that, she seems healthy other than her feet bothering her and she is looseing balance.
i don't want to cull her she is a very loved pet, i know i can never show her again but the thought of putting her down just kills me she is only about a year old and has so much to live for. i would do anything i can to help her i just don't know what i need to do. if she looses what has been frostbite it will be the fronts of her toes and about a 1/3 of the pads of her feet. first thing i need to know is does she need her toes amputated or anything? will the frostbite or any kind of infection spread? sorry i'm new to this only ever had to deal with a friends roos haveing frostbite on combs before, nothing this bad. with snowie i don't know what to do or where to start but i know she needs help asap there is no poultry vets here i'm the closest thing she has.
is there anything we can do if she looses both of her feet or most of them i doubt she will ever be able to walk again it will be stubbs. is there anyway to build something for her that would help her to not be so crippled if she makes it through all this, like prostec feet or something? for now she is seperated where she is warm and comfy but i don't know how to help her so i need ur help and advice. i know she will be a handicap for life if she pulls through all this but i can't see turning my back on her when she needs someone most i'm willing to be there for her through everything to take care of her i just need help getting there.
thanks,
silkie
temp dropped worse. the hen decided to bath in the pan of water and stayed in to long and got stuck and the next day when the roads cleared we could get off our hill again to take the waters back to them we found the hen frozen in her coop in the pan of water. her feet where froze to a block of ice i had to break her free of. we warmed her and dried her and she spent the night at home with us but apparently we where to late she had been in it too long in to cold of weather. she did fine the next day but wabbled a little the first few hours since we kept her off her feet as much as possible. she was lonely without her coop mates so we took her back over, after that she was fine till today no signs of anything till now we have been keeping an eye on her.
today when we went to feed and water everyone again we noticed her limping. we checked her feet and some parts are solid/hard feeling like freezedried and very dry looking as if she has frostbite and they are dieing. they are not black that we can tell but she is a silkie so that's hard to tell but i asume it is the start of them to die off. she doesn't look to have surface frostbite or anything like that, she seems healthy other than her feet bothering her and she is looseing balance.
i don't want to cull her she is a very loved pet, i know i can never show her again but the thought of putting her down just kills me she is only about a year old and has so much to live for. i would do anything i can to help her i just don't know what i need to do. if she looses what has been frostbite it will be the fronts of her toes and about a 1/3 of the pads of her feet. first thing i need to know is does she need her toes amputated or anything? will the frostbite or any kind of infection spread? sorry i'm new to this only ever had to deal with a friends roos haveing frostbite on combs before, nothing this bad. with snowie i don't know what to do or where to start but i know she needs help asap there is no poultry vets here i'm the closest thing she has.
is there anything we can do if she looses both of her feet or most of them i doubt she will ever be able to walk again it will be stubbs. is there anyway to build something for her that would help her to not be so crippled if she makes it through all this, like prostec feet or something? for now she is seperated where she is warm and comfy but i don't know how to help her so i need ur help and advice. i know she will be a handicap for life if she pulls through all this but i can't see turning my back on her when she needs someone most i'm willing to be there for her through everything to take care of her i just need help getting there.
thanks,
silkie