GreenHaven
Songster
I am a new chicken keeper, so please help me figure out what to do here. This hen might be molting but my flock is 8 months old and it's winter so the timing is wrong, and the feathers look broken off. There are 8 hens and one rooster, and all grew up together. I removed her from the flock yesterday (to an isolation pen) in case she is being bullied or the rooster is too rough. It's been unseasonably cold her in the Pacific Northwest, and they've not been out like usual (they avoid the snow), so it would be hard for her to hide right now. I checked her over closely, and I took these pictures of her last night. I could not see any sign of mites, but I've never had any so far and I know they can be hard to see. I tried returning her to the flock this afternoon (she did not seem at all content being separated) but she was only in there for 5 minutes when I heard a major commotion. When I went back to see what is was, she was lying on her side in the snow and the rooster was standing over her and a couple hens seemed to be pecking at her. As I approached, the hens took off but the rooster stayed where he was. Another hen come up and rather gently peck her foot feathers, and then her neck feathers. It almost seemed like grooming. When I knelt beside the hen (rooster still just standing over her), the other hen backed away and I had to move the roo to the side to pick her up. The rooster was very calm - just looking at me. I gave him a few pets to see if he would react in any way - and he did not. It was a little weird, but this rooster is the most docile I have had. I don't think my rooster is damaging her - I don't think it would look like this - but I'm not sure. Could he have been trying to protect her?
Anyway, I picked her up and put her back in the isolation pen in my workshop, but I'm at a loss on how to proceed. This hen went broody in the fall, and she seemed to get picked on at that time. She has a split in her beak from that event. There was one hen that I think was responsible - but it was always over a nesting box. I don't seem to have a true head hen that I can determine, and no general bully. I even have a hen with pretty severe wry neck (tried all the cures - none worked) and she does not get picked on.
Thanks in advance for any suggestions.
Anyway, I picked her up and put her back in the isolation pen in my workshop, but I'm at a loss on how to proceed. This hen went broody in the fall, and she seemed to get picked on at that time. She has a split in her beak from that event. There was one hen that I think was responsible - but it was always over a nesting box. I don't seem to have a true head hen that I can determine, and no general bully. I even have a hen with pretty severe wry neck (tried all the cures - none worked) and she does not get picked on.
Thanks in advance for any suggestions.


