kittydoc
Songster
@Faraday40 I am so sorry to hear about you losing a chicken to impacted crop. Unfortunately, your friend made a common mistake. Turning them upside down and letting it drain almost always results in a dead chicken within 1-3 days. There is a safe way to try to get some of it out, but turning them 90 degrees upside down isn't safe. If you care to look, I posted a successful treatment of one of my hens a few months back on this thread. I'll look it up and repost the link shortly.
I don't think there is any genetic predisposition. Some chickens just make the mistake of eating long, fibrous material more than others, and once they start eating a very long piece of tough grass or weed, they can't stop. Literally. They have no way to bite it off, so they have to keep eating it. Their crop can't handle it without intervention. If I see a long piece of material sticking out of a hen's mouth, I pull it out, and we do our very best to keep weed/grass height low enough that they can't get impacted. That can be tough if one lets them free range over a wide area. It's just one of the many hazards of keeping chickens, and nobody's fault.
We have straw in our coop but I don't believe that was the cause. I've never seen them eat more than short sections of straw, but I have definitely seen them eat or try to eat long pieces of green grass and weeds.
I'm sorry this was such a special bird for a youngster. Adds to the heartbreak. Again, my condolences.
I don't think there is any genetic predisposition. Some chickens just make the mistake of eating long, fibrous material more than others, and once they start eating a very long piece of tough grass or weed, they can't stop. Literally. They have no way to bite it off, so they have to keep eating it. Their crop can't handle it without intervention. If I see a long piece of material sticking out of a hen's mouth, I pull it out, and we do our very best to keep weed/grass height low enough that they can't get impacted. That can be tough if one lets them free range over a wide area. It's just one of the many hazards of keeping chickens, and nobody's fault.
We have straw in our coop but I don't believe that was the cause. I've never seen them eat more than short sections of straw, but I have definitely seen them eat or try to eat long pieces of green grass and weeds.
I'm sorry this was such a special bird for a youngster. Adds to the heartbreak. Again, my condolences.