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thriftyplants
Songster
- Mar 2, 2020
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HAHA sorry! Probably not even necessary but hey I figured if it could helpIt's a girl.
I was not expecting the vent photo.
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HAHA sorry! Probably not even necessary but hey I figured if it could helpIt's a girl.
I was not expecting the vent photo.
Thank you!! She's the sweetest love bug to have ever lived. Also an absolute glutton.She/he is really pretty and rather patient. I love the eyeball in the lower rhs.
Being too fat can delay or stop them from laying.Thank you!! She's the sweetest love bug to have ever lived. Also an absolute glutton.
No respiratory infection, I did have a "pullet" that was actually a roo that I bought separate from these ones that turned out to have worms while in Quarantinea and I treated with both fenbendazole and corid.@thriftyplants Did your hens experience some kind of respiratory infection while growing up? And if so, how did you treat them?
Infections can lead to false layer syndrome: https://www.merckvetmanual.com/poultry/disorders-of-the-reproductive-system/false-layer-in-poultry@thriftyplants Did your hens experience some kind of respiratory infection while growing up? And if so, how did you treat them?
When I got her as a chick she did have the squirts and bad pasty butt. It was like a squirt gun coming out. It cleared up on its own, not sure if that could have indicated some issue.Infections can lead to false layer syndrome: https://www.merckvetmanual.com/poultry/disorders-of-the-reproductive-system/false-layer-in-poultry
When I got her as a chick she did have the squirts and bad pasty butt. It was like a squirt gun coming out. It cleared up on its own, not sure if that could have indicated some issue.
Thank you for this informative link. If she is indeed a female, that is so far the only plausible reason I have seen for her not laying.Might be the reason, as " Oviduct dysfunction can occur after infections with Escherichia coli or Mycoplasma gallisepticum." As stated in the link: https://www.merckvetmanual.com/poultry/disorders-of-the-reproductive-system/false-layer-in-poultry