Lethargic Hen

Crusty McPottydoodle

Crowing
14 Years
Mar 14, 2009
720
25
276
The Wet Coast
Last night I noticed one of my hens lying down on the ground when I went out to put the girls to bed. This morning, when I went to let them out, there was a broken soft shelled egg in the hen house and shortly after she went into the run, she went and lay down in a corner. She has moved to various parts of the run, but just keeps laying down. I sprinkled some scratch in the run and she was eager to eat it. At one point, she had her head in her feathers like she was sleeping.

I went out a little while later and she got up to come say hello.

There was one instance of runny poo (I don't know which hen was responsible) and there is a little blood in it, but not a lot. Also not sure whose egg was in the house this morning, but my suspicion would be that it is the lethargic hen.

She is probably about 24 weeks or so (I bought her as a layer so I don't know her exact age). She is on layer pellets and she has freely available oyster shell and grit. I use pellet bedding sprinkled liberally with stall dry.

The other two hens seem to be perfectly happy. This hen has been my best layer - she gives 2-3 eggs that weigh 88 grams or more. She has been happy and healthy right up until last evening. I didn't really think too much of her lying down last night because it was her bedtime.

I haven't had a chance to do a hands on check of her as I have 2 very busy toddlers to look after and won't be able to until the little ones go down for nap.

I was a bit worried about coccidiosis but I looked at the poo site and the runny poo I saw looked more like the lining shedding photo and really nothing like the coccidiosis photo.

I won't hesitate to take her to the vet if it seems warranted, but if this may be something she will get over in a day or two on her own, then I am fine with letting nature take its course.

I look forward to your insight.

Cheryl
 
I really am not too experienced in the egg department, but the blood in the poo could be coccidia. I dealt with the same thing with my girls. I looked everywhere on the internet & checked all of the photos & their poop didnt look a thing like the ones ive seen. Until one day I went out to find one of my girls dead & the others pooping nothing but blood. I treated EVERYONE with the meds & gave them yogurt & they all recovered. In the end I lost two in total. But Id try to keep a close eye on her if you can. & Believe me, I understand how hard it is with only ONE toddler ! I couldnt imagine 2 !!
 
Quote:
So does this mean I should treat for coccidiosis right away, or wait a day to see if she perks up. I just saw her poop and it was pretty normal looking. There was something reddish in the middle of it, but it was formed rather than runny (note to self, don't feed the girls pureed fresh tomatoes when there is concern over blood in the poop). The other thing is that it has been rather warm the last couple of days. Part of the reason I am a bit concerned is that my other two hens aren't laying down as much as this one is although last time we had a hot spell, they were all laying down a lot.

I am reluctant to medicate based on a hunch as I am trying to keep my girls organic and medication free in addition to my concern over bacteria and parasites becoming resistant.

I will medicate her if there is a consensus that I should do so.

Thanks for the input.

Cheryl
 
Sounds eggbound to me. I'm going thru that now with a frizzle. I didn't know why she was lethargic. GlendaHeywood has an awesome probiotic recipe - it can be found on the thread titled "Frizzle not well..." on page 3 of this emergency section. The hen passed a dried egg blob after the 1st feeding! I added a fish oil pill to the recipe. There's also a link to a site with tons of photos of poo - normal and not - but I'm not sure how to find it. Anyone?
Good luck!
 
Quote:
Not sure if she could be eggbound - there was the broken softshell egg first thing this morning and then 2 more normal eggs later in the morning meaning all 3 hens laid today.

The poo photo site is:

http://www.chat.allotment.org.uk/index.php?topic=17568.0

I did check it.

I will go look at the probiotic recipes, though. They certainly can't hurt. I did just feed the girls a big bowl of yoghurt and they were all happy to get it (including Cheese - my lethargic one)

Cheryl
 
I guess the soft-shelled egg, combined with the lethargy is what makes me think there's a possible egg-producing type problem. I'm hoping the vit E + fish oil will keep my frizzle "lubed up" enough. She looked like she felt a lot better this morning. Good luck with yours!
 

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