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I wish I could help, but I have no idea. When I've had birds that someone suggested a B vitamin deficiency, I crushed vitamin tablets and sprinkled it all over and through some scrambled egg and it disappeared in a hurry. Good luck with her!
Thanks bucka! I gave her some chicken liver soup Tues & Wed and picked up some B Complex. Last night her legs were doing a split but this morning. Got really worried it was Marek's. This morning she had both of them tucked under her. I've been feeding her scrambled egg w/garlic, oregano & Moonlight Mile Farms herbal Intensive Care Remedy since I brought her in. I've added a crushed up Vit. B to it. I'll be adding liver to it as well. Hoping this works! Of course she's a favorite!
@CoopChick, has your lame hen been molting? I had one that briefly lost strength in her legs, weaving and wobbling low to the ground during her molt. I fed her scrambled eggs for a while and she bounced back. I hope yours improves!
can you bring a poop sample to a vet? many vets say they wont do fecals on chickens but just say it is cat poopShe was losing a few neck feathers and has some shiny new ones. She's eating & drinking fine. No other symptoms but the lame leg.
I'm wondering if I should worm her. Any thoughts?
awesome!!I forgot to mention my recent adventures in rat eradication. They have ignored the blocks of poison and avoided the traps. I gave up burying hardware cloth when the ground froze.
There are large horizontal tunnels running outside through the snow. One tunnel is right on the other side of the chicken fence where the chickens have no access. I took a block of poison and chopped it into much smaller pieces. I used a big glob of peanut butter to bind all the pieces together and packed it around the end of a stick, like a corn dog. Then I carefully pushed the corn dog through the wire fence and into the tunnel, using another stick to push it farther in there away from the chicken area.
The next morning, the corn dog was gone, stick and all! I hope they are eating it and not just hauling it off. I plan to make another today. Meanwhile, the piece of cardboard that I chopped/mixed things on was covered in peanut butter and loose poison pieces, so I put that in the shack coop entryway where we get mice. It's been licked clean.
I forgot to mention my recent adventures in rat eradication. They have ignored the blocks of poison and avoided the traps. I gave up burying hardware cloth when the ground froze.
There are large horizontal tunnels running outside through the snow. One tunnel is right on the other side of the chicken fence where the chickens have no access. I took a block of poison and chopped it into much smaller pieces. I used a big glob of peanut butter to bind all the pieces together and packed it around the end of a stick, like a corn dog. Then I carefully pushed the corn dog through the wire fence and into the tunnel, using another stick to push it farther in there away from the chicken area.
The next morning, the corn dog was gone, stick and all! I hope they are eating it and not just hauling it off. I plan to make another today. Meanwhile, the piece of cardboard that I chopped/mixed things on was covered in peanut butter and loose poison pieces, so I put that in the shack coop entryway where we get mice. It's been licked clean.