Hi, I am new to the board, so I hope this is where this thread belongs. Last fall we took in two 6-year-old hens from our neighbors who had to move. They only had the two hens left from their original flock and these two were very good friends. Since we had never had chickens before, we put their cage (formerly a rabbit cage) in our garage and since they were used to free-ranging, we open the garage door and the cage door in the morning and close them both back up again at night. With all the winter snow, they loved roaming around in the garage, which has some furniture, power tools, random wood and other such nonsense as most people have in a garage. Shortly after we got them, one of them (Goldy) got lost in the back of the garage for two weeks. I don't know what she ate and drank for those two weeks, but we were sure she was gone until we stumbled across her. During those two weeks, the other hen (Frosty) stayed holed up in their box in their cage and never came out to play. She seemed very depressed. As soon as Goldy came back, Frosty came out of her box and seemed very much happier. This was all well and good and the two of them spent the winter together.
Fast forward to this past weekend and when we closed up the cage on Saturday night, Goldy wasn't there. This has happened for single nights before, so we closed the garage door and left the cage door open. In the morning when I went to give them fresh water and open the doors for them, I looked around for Goldy. I found her dead on the floor in the back of the garage. I did not see her head at first and thought it was gone. When I picked her up, I saw that her head was folded completely under her body. I have no idea how she broke her neck. Rigor mortis had set in, and I didn't know what to do with her, so I put her in a trash bag in my freezer. The broken neck was the only injury I saw, thought I was distraught and did not look very thoroughly.
I did not want Frosty to get depressed again, so I asked a friend from church if we could buy one of their grown chickens from them. We brought home one black sex link and put her in a separate but very nearby identical cage. I know better than to just thrust them together and expect them to be friends. The new hen is very restless in her new confinement (I can't blame her), and she snuck out when I was giving her fresh water to replace what she had dumped. Very cautiously, I watched the two chickens in the big open garage front. My 3-year-old gave both hens some treats and they were very close to each other as they pecked up the treats. Frosty pecked the black one once on the back of the neck then went back to gobbling up treats. I took that as a message of, "Get out of my face." A minute or two later and another little peck. A couple of minutes later and the black one flew at Frosty, who then tried to run away. At that point, I picked up the black one and put her back in her cage to separate them. I have heard varying times to keep them separated, and we are on day 2 now. The black one is unhappy being cooped up (literally) and keeps tossing her little waterer around and dumping it. I've refilled it three times today already at only 3:30p.
What can I do to introduce these two birds most easily? The one hasn't had a flock of more than just 2 for quite some time (I don't know exactly how long, but I've had them since November), and the other comes from a flock of 5. Frosty is about 6 years old and the new one is about 10 months old. The new one is slightly smaller than Frosty, but not much. The new one is a black sex link, and I think Frosty is a Buff Orpington, but I could very well be wrong. She is a large breed, though. We also plan to get some chicks next month to expand our flock to a dozen or so.
Thank you.
Judy
Fast forward to this past weekend and when we closed up the cage on Saturday night, Goldy wasn't there. This has happened for single nights before, so we closed the garage door and left the cage door open. In the morning when I went to give them fresh water and open the doors for them, I looked around for Goldy. I found her dead on the floor in the back of the garage. I did not see her head at first and thought it was gone. When I picked her up, I saw that her head was folded completely under her body. I have no idea how she broke her neck. Rigor mortis had set in, and I didn't know what to do with her, so I put her in a trash bag in my freezer. The broken neck was the only injury I saw, thought I was distraught and did not look very thoroughly.
I did not want Frosty to get depressed again, so I asked a friend from church if we could buy one of their grown chickens from them. We brought home one black sex link and put her in a separate but very nearby identical cage. I know better than to just thrust them together and expect them to be friends. The new hen is very restless in her new confinement (I can't blame her), and she snuck out when I was giving her fresh water to replace what she had dumped. Very cautiously, I watched the two chickens in the big open garage front. My 3-year-old gave both hens some treats and they were very close to each other as they pecked up the treats. Frosty pecked the black one once on the back of the neck then went back to gobbling up treats. I took that as a message of, "Get out of my face." A minute or two later and another little peck. A couple of minutes later and the black one flew at Frosty, who then tried to run away. At that point, I picked up the black one and put her back in her cage to separate them. I have heard varying times to keep them separated, and we are on day 2 now. The black one is unhappy being cooped up (literally) and keeps tossing her little waterer around and dumping it. I've refilled it three times today already at only 3:30p.
What can I do to introduce these two birds most easily? The one hasn't had a flock of more than just 2 for quite some time (I don't know exactly how long, but I've had them since November), and the other comes from a flock of 5. Frosty is about 6 years old and the new one is about 10 months old. The new one is slightly smaller than Frosty, but not much. The new one is a black sex link, and I think Frosty is a Buff Orpington, but I could very well be wrong. She is a large breed, though. We also plan to get some chicks next month to expand our flock to a dozen or so.
Thank you.
Judy