- Apr 29, 2011
- 30
- 0
- 32
We have had a problem for awhile, the rooster rips out the hens' feathers when he mates them. Months ago I tried seperating some hens to heal but the hawks found them. I bought a few chicken saddles and put one on the worst hen and the rooster attacked her mercilously-- it was like he thought she was someone he didn't know.
I let it go on for a week hoping it would pass, she became so depressed she wouldn't come down off the roost during the day because the flock would attack her, esp the rooster.
We just had a broody hatch five chicks...she was seperated for a month. I just put her and the babies back in with the flock, we have done this before and everything was fine. I noticed her acting weird for a day or two and today I caught her becuase I saw blood on her back. He ripped her wide open, three inch gash with a big puncture I suppose where his spur came out of her after gashing her. She is bad off. My husband is an ARNP, we have some medical supplies, we cleaned & sutured her and put her in another coop alone.
Later, I started checking the other hens and FIVE of them have these awful wounds that were hidden under their winds, some are old and rotten and festering. I feel so horrible about this so please don't anybody flame me for letting this happen.
I have all five in the hen hospital with the first one, I don't know what to do for these wounds, like I said, some are old and the skin is partly dead and there is no suturing them now. I cleaned them as best I could with soap, water, betadine and put a bunch of triple antibiotic cream on them. They are all in there with antibiotics in the water.
We caught the rooster and clipped his spurs and filed them as dull as we could get them and also filed his other nails.
I can't kill the roo- he is the only thing keeping them from the hawks. If I put a saddle on ALL the hens will he learn to cope?
Will this not happen again since we filed him down?
Has anyone else had this happen? I have no idea if these hens will make it. The first one- the worst one, is the only one who acts like she's hurt, the others act fine despite these horrible wounds..
These hens have been free range their whole lives and have gone absolutely mad when I have tried to keep them locked up before when we were having hawk problems. The roo is a superb hawk attacker, he has singlehandedly fought off three different hawks, one that was much bigger than him. He is a great daddy to his little chickies, great husband to the hens except for this but this is bad.
help!
I let it go on for a week hoping it would pass, she became so depressed she wouldn't come down off the roost during the day because the flock would attack her, esp the rooster.
We just had a broody hatch five chicks...she was seperated for a month. I just put her and the babies back in with the flock, we have done this before and everything was fine. I noticed her acting weird for a day or two and today I caught her becuase I saw blood on her back. He ripped her wide open, three inch gash with a big puncture I suppose where his spur came out of her after gashing her. She is bad off. My husband is an ARNP, we have some medical supplies, we cleaned & sutured her and put her in another coop alone.
Later, I started checking the other hens and FIVE of them have these awful wounds that were hidden under their winds, some are old and rotten and festering. I feel so horrible about this so please don't anybody flame me for letting this happen.
I have all five in the hen hospital with the first one, I don't know what to do for these wounds, like I said, some are old and the skin is partly dead and there is no suturing them now. I cleaned them as best I could with soap, water, betadine and put a bunch of triple antibiotic cream on them. They are all in there with antibiotics in the water.
We caught the rooster and clipped his spurs and filed them as dull as we could get them and also filed his other nails.
I can't kill the roo- he is the only thing keeping them from the hawks. If I put a saddle on ALL the hens will he learn to cope?
Will this not happen again since we filed him down?
Has anyone else had this happen? I have no idea if these hens will make it. The first one- the worst one, is the only one who acts like she's hurt, the others act fine despite these horrible wounds..
These hens have been free range their whole lives and have gone absolutely mad when I have tried to keep them locked up before when we were having hawk problems. The roo is a superb hawk attacker, he has singlehandedly fought off three different hawks, one that was much bigger than him. He is a great daddy to his little chickies, great husband to the hens except for this but this is bad.
help!