One of mine had prolapse. I put her in a cage in the house (spare bedroom with an old blanket under the cage and covering half of the to make cleanup easier and to keep her calm). Then I gently cleaned off her vent area and pushed her vent in with my gloved finger and honey. A chicken breeder told me to use honey. It took a while until it quit prolapsing, but I sat with her some and petted her and she seemed to like staying in the house. After she laid a couple of eggs in the cage and didn’t prolapse I put her back out. This was a couple of years ago and she’s been fine ever since. LSU costs a fortune. I have used them for necropsy if one died unexpectedly.Taking another bird to LSU vet because there's no other avian vets near. This time, it's a bleeding prolapse that won't go back in.![]()