Morning all Cockadoodledooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!!!
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Morning all Cockadoodledooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!!!
Have you considered crop surgery? If you solder components onto a circuit board, surely your hands are steady enough to make a 2" cut and pull out whatever's in there. If you're going to lose her anyway, this could be an option to do before she's too weak to heal.Update on my Golden Comet pullet with an impacted crop -
I had her isolated and withheld everything but water for 24 hours, then I fed her raw egg mixed with coconut oil for four days. After the first day and a half, her crop had gone down to golf-ball size and was very hard, and it hasn't changed since.
Yesterday, with no signs of improvement, I started thinking that I'm going to have to cull her... except that she's still acting alert, active, and healthy. She's lost some weight for sure, but otherwise seems fine. So I turned her out into the flock to see what would happen.
Last night her crop was pretty full and squishy again, but no more than a well-fed chicken. I checked her early this morning, and it's back down to the hard golf-ball. So. Either the food she's eating is getting around whatever is in there, or she's throwing it up in the night. I can't observe her closely enough to know which is happening. So, from here I'm just going to keep an eye on her. If she starts to act sickly or her crops sours again, or if she continues to lose weight, I'll isolate her for 5 days of water only, no litter or anything, as suggested by armorfirelady, and see what happens.
I really don't want to lose this one. She's one of the friendlier birds in my flock. But if she's starving to death, I won't just let it go on, either.
Have you considered crop surgery? If you solder components onto a circuit board, surely your hands are steady enough to make a 2" cut and pull out whatever's in there. If you're going to lose her anyway, this could be an option to do before she's too weak to heal.
I've researched only--not done this--but I've been amazed at the things that the birds eat. Dried caulk, roofing nails, stringy vines, mice skeletons, fishing hook....
You probably already have all the things you need in your chicken medicine kit. Alcohol, sterile scalpel, needle, dissolvable suture, skin glue, tweezers, antibiotic ointment.
That's exactly what I'm telling myself.But, there's no point in stressing because that's not going to change what they are in the end.![]()
PS I'm staring at these pics and feel that same thing. Are they or aren't they?Here's Georgie, by the way. I'm seeing red in 'her' hackles and she's only 3 weeks old, which is my main basis for being suspicious of her.
And Mabel.
And I can't share pictures of the babies without Elda sneaking in.She's 100% girl by her color at this point, so I don't mind showing her off a bit. Cuddles!![]()
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Vanilla helps keep bugs off. It does not last nearly as long as the chemicals but it smells nice and costs about the same if you buy the pure / real stuff at sams.
Good news / Bad news. Bad news first. My third hen that went broody, with precise killing intent, pecked her new baby chick to death. The one that she did not like was black while the others were light colored. She has 2 other chicks from the eggs I gave her. But she really prefers the chicks from the first broody to hatch. The good news, my Rosie, the BLRW hen, hatched out all 7 eggs and I gave her some of the chicks from the killer broody and from my incubator so now she has way too many chicks. She is the happiest chicken on the place, even though we moved her nest once she was done hatching her 7. She had set up camp in the duck house and there was no easy way to get to her without her waking up. So we waited and waited. Now she is in the broody pen. It looks like she may become the leader of the bunch.