- Oct 8, 2010
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My apologies, this is long and more of a personal chat.
I was gifted a hen out of the blue nearly two months ago. I did the quarantine thing for a month. Dewormed her, watched her. She seemed fine. T’was a little bit on the quiet side but not unusual for a lone young hen to whom everything was now all new and unfamiliar.
The first odd thing was she immediately got sick. I had just lost a hen the day previous before she showed up and so was assuming whatever it was it must’ve been in the air and with her being stressed from the new digs, I figured this was what was going around. None of my other birds got sick. Just her. And it cleared quite quickly after a round of Duramyacin 10. I thought problem solved. Waited a a few weeks (for her to get her strength back from being sick) and then proceeded to deworm her... so glad I did, she had more than a few varieties. Retreated her with the wormers 10 days later as prescribed. She seemed fine. Laying eggs. Still in the quiet side, as in seemed inactive, less sprightly but her breed is new to me, I just assumed it’s all good.
So at the end of the extended quarantine time I decided it was safe to put her with my flock. None of the birds would have her. She ended up in a far corner away from everyone each day (it was 3 days total I tried...I know not long enough for her to fit in but I noticed she wasn’t eating or drinking at all each day. My thoughts were that she was just having a hard time fitting in but I’d have to make sure she’s eating again. I brought her back into quarantine to rethink on things or potentially find her a new home, then Thanksgiving week came about and I was distracted. I kept noticing, she wasn’t eating. And after Thanksgiving when I had the time again to attend to her more closely I noticed she really was thin, ...and lethargic...and now not interested in eating at all.
I took her into the vet. Right away she also noted the thinness and that she has a heart murmur. She also noted perhaps feeling something hard in the abdomen but couldn’t place exactly where. The vet felt given her age (she’s not even a year yet) and the murmur that it’s most likely a genetic defect but spoke to me that it could be something viral and bad such as Newcastle’s disease, though she speculated that it did not appear as such. I got some Tylan with vitamins in it to give her, but chances are she’s not going to make it....
Don’t get me wrong, I do hope she recovers and I’m still doing my best to make sure she’s getting tube/hand fed and her meds, but I’m FREAKING OUT inside thinking I had her with my healthy sweet flock and all the “what if’s” are going through my mind. ...like what if this is avian flu, what if this is super viral? What if my flock is going to be obliterated by introducing her.... I’m not exactly panicked, but I am upset and wondering how other chicken owners cope with this? The threat of having your hard work just wiped out within a small amount of time... how do you do this?
I want to note, none of my other chickens (“knock on wood”) are showing any signs of illness. It’s been almost two weeks since she was in there with them. About how long would it take if it was viral and deadly? I do know with chicken illnesses, it’s almost impossible to know exactly what is going on without blood tests or other tests. I am hoping that the vet is correct that this is most likely a genetic defect, but seriously, how do you as a dedicated chicken flock owner cope with these threats hanging over your head? I would suppose you can just start again, but if you’ve tried to raise a good flock for breeding.. it’s like all that care and work is gone in a flash, not to mention the personal attachment to the birds themselves. I’ve been chicken keeping for nearly 10 years and have been fortunate enough to not have really bad calamities effect my flock, but there’s been a lot of trial and error and stress....it’s gotten to the point where I’m thinking, this sucks!!!!
I’ve always tried my best to make sure my flock got the best care. I spend extra $$$ on products to keep them healthy and to have what they need, good feed, medications, treatments, strong fencing, extra spaces...etc. and I truly believe that extra effort has managed to give benefits. I understand these issues like these fast spreading diseases are why most people don’t put in the extra money into it, but how do good breeders do this without going, well... *postal*




Also, with diseases being so hap-hazard, how does any breeder keep a clean flock disease free forever? It seems like a ticking time bomb, or do people just sell anyway?!!!
I suppose I’ve been doing what needs to be done all along, but I’m wondering if there’s some sort of nuggets of information I’m missing that would make chicken keeping less stressful...or is this always what it’s going to be like? I sort of thought all these passing years of experience would soften the stress, but I think I’m finding because I know what’s actually out there I’ve only become more stressed!!
Any advices or chit chat I would be grateful for. Anyone else feel this way? Thank you kindly for letting me express. I love this website and owe a lot to everyone here contributing. <3 <3 <3
I was gifted a hen out of the blue nearly two months ago. I did the quarantine thing for a month. Dewormed her, watched her. She seemed fine. T’was a little bit on the quiet side but not unusual for a lone young hen to whom everything was now all new and unfamiliar.
The first odd thing was she immediately got sick. I had just lost a hen the day previous before she showed up and so was assuming whatever it was it must’ve been in the air and with her being stressed from the new digs, I figured this was what was going around. None of my other birds got sick. Just her. And it cleared quite quickly after a round of Duramyacin 10. I thought problem solved. Waited a a few weeks (for her to get her strength back from being sick) and then proceeded to deworm her... so glad I did, she had more than a few varieties. Retreated her with the wormers 10 days later as prescribed. She seemed fine. Laying eggs. Still in the quiet side, as in seemed inactive, less sprightly but her breed is new to me, I just assumed it’s all good.
So at the end of the extended quarantine time I decided it was safe to put her with my flock. None of the birds would have her. She ended up in a far corner away from everyone each day (it was 3 days total I tried...I know not long enough for her to fit in but I noticed she wasn’t eating or drinking at all each day. My thoughts were that she was just having a hard time fitting in but I’d have to make sure she’s eating again. I brought her back into quarantine to rethink on things or potentially find her a new home, then Thanksgiving week came about and I was distracted. I kept noticing, she wasn’t eating. And after Thanksgiving when I had the time again to attend to her more closely I noticed she really was thin, ...and lethargic...and now not interested in eating at all.
I took her into the vet. Right away she also noted the thinness and that she has a heart murmur. She also noted perhaps feeling something hard in the abdomen but couldn’t place exactly where. The vet felt given her age (she’s not even a year yet) and the murmur that it’s most likely a genetic defect but spoke to me that it could be something viral and bad such as Newcastle’s disease, though she speculated that it did not appear as such. I got some Tylan with vitamins in it to give her, but chances are she’s not going to make it....
Don’t get me wrong, I do hope she recovers and I’m still doing my best to make sure she’s getting tube/hand fed and her meds, but I’m FREAKING OUT inside thinking I had her with my healthy sweet flock and all the “what if’s” are going through my mind. ...like what if this is avian flu, what if this is super viral? What if my flock is going to be obliterated by introducing her.... I’m not exactly panicked, but I am upset and wondering how other chicken owners cope with this? The threat of having your hard work just wiped out within a small amount of time... how do you do this?
I want to note, none of my other chickens (“knock on wood”) are showing any signs of illness. It’s been almost two weeks since she was in there with them. About how long would it take if it was viral and deadly? I do know with chicken illnesses, it’s almost impossible to know exactly what is going on without blood tests or other tests. I am hoping that the vet is correct that this is most likely a genetic defect, but seriously, how do you as a dedicated chicken flock owner cope with these threats hanging over your head? I would suppose you can just start again, but if you’ve tried to raise a good flock for breeding.. it’s like all that care and work is gone in a flash, not to mention the personal attachment to the birds themselves. I’ve been chicken keeping for nearly 10 years and have been fortunate enough to not have really bad calamities effect my flock, but there’s been a lot of trial and error and stress....it’s gotten to the point where I’m thinking, this sucks!!!!
I’ve always tried my best to make sure my flock got the best care. I spend extra $$$ on products to keep them healthy and to have what they need, good feed, medications, treatments, strong fencing, extra spaces...etc. and I truly believe that extra effort has managed to give benefits. I understand these issues like these fast spreading diseases are why most people don’t put in the extra money into it, but how do good breeders do this without going, well... *postal*






I suppose I’ve been doing what needs to be done all along, but I’m wondering if there’s some sort of nuggets of information I’m missing that would make chicken keeping less stressful...or is this always what it’s going to be like? I sort of thought all these passing years of experience would soften the stress, but I think I’m finding because I know what’s actually out there I’ve only become more stressed!!
Any advices or chit chat I would be grateful for. Anyone else feel this way? Thank you kindly for letting me express. I love this website and owe a lot to everyone here contributing. <3 <3 <3