Welcome to BYC, seems like the prior folks have given some very good advice. Hope you find the tips useful.
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Hello and very belated welcome to BYC!
Poor thing!
Has she been seen by a vet?
Chicken poop is like concrete.
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Yes, she’s been seen by a vet. It is really hard to find a chicken vet in our area, and avian vets won’t see her. But the wildlife rescue vet had a look. If she’d been younger, we probably could have done more for her. My objective now is to keep her clean, well-nourished, and entertained. She is in the middle of our open floor plan kitchen/den and there are lots of other animals around, so there’s usually plenty going on. Every morning I let in my Brahma rooster and he flirts with her for an hour or so until I put him back out. She gets frequent baths and applications of coconut or emu oil afterward, and sits on someone’s lap in the evening when we’re watching TV. It’s not the most interesting or exciting life a chicken’s ever had, but it could be worse.
First of all, bless your soul for taking this sweet little chicken biscuit in and caring for her .Hey, everybody. I’m not really sure where else to post this question. I have a sweet non-ambulatory hen that was brought to a wildlife rescue I volunteer at and I agreed to bring her home and care for her since I have a small flock. We think she had splay-leg and never received treatment; she was full-grown when I got her. I keep Lolo in a large cage in our kitchen and she has as good a life as I can give her. I use large, soft chenille rugs on the bottom of her cage that I change out daily, plus a soft, stuffed fleece pad for her to sleep on. The problem I’m having is that the poop does not want to wash out of the rugs. I hose them off before I put them in the washer and most of it rinses off, but there is always some that is hard and almost crumbly that will not fully come off. I soak everything in water for hours before I wash it and use Tide detergent and OxyClean in warm water, heavy cycle. Does anyone have any tips about something I can use to get this stuff to dissolve? I tried scraping with a knife but ended up pulling some of the fibers out of the rug.
My other question is due to the fact that she laid her first egg a few months ago, and another one a month later. I’m a little worried about her developing complications related to her inability to walk. She can scramble around the cage pretty well, but she is leaned over to one side a bit. Has anyone ever cared for a chicken like this before? Anything in particular I should watch for? Note on the pictures - I now use rugs that are big enough so I can View attachment 2469071View attachment 2469072use just one to cover the bottom of the cage.