Martha444
Chirping
- Jul 26, 2022
- 23
- 54
- 79
I had two chicks develop this condition this year in two different "cohorts" - incubation batches. The first chick got so bad we had to cull the poor feller.
I did some more research when the second one developed it. There is an itchy flaky skin condition on face and feet with yellowish crusty buildup, sometimes developing into lesions. Poor pale coloring, lack of growth (about half of what the rest of the cohort is putting on), underwhelming mobility with some stiffness. Feathers were coming in looking a little "frizzie".
My research suggested a biotin deficiency possibly due to overload of parasites or an underlying metabolic condition.
Frizzie went on a protocol of filtered water with silver and apple cider vinegar, and her organic starter feed was supplemented with boiled egg yolk (biotin and B's), plain yogurt, and ditatomaceous earth. After four days the silver and diatomaceous earth were removed.
Her skin condition, mobility, color(for her), and interactivity greatly improved over the following two weeks and she started putting on weight a little faster but still cannot be considered normal or healthy. I tried removing the egg yolk, continued feeding filtered water with ACV and yogurt in food but the skin condition started to reemerge. This is not good because I can't continue to keep her separated from the rest of the flock to feed her a special diet for the rest of her life.
I have the question everyone has! Does anyone have any ideas about what this might be or a suggestion about what to try? The images attached are from when the skin condition was at its worst right before I started treatment. Her tiny comb has been coated with rooster booster because the other chicks had started picking on her when they started to get much bigger than her. She was separated from the flock into an adjacent grassy area shortly after this.
I did some more research when the second one developed it. There is an itchy flaky skin condition on face and feet with yellowish crusty buildup, sometimes developing into lesions. Poor pale coloring, lack of growth (about half of what the rest of the cohort is putting on), underwhelming mobility with some stiffness. Feathers were coming in looking a little "frizzie".
My research suggested a biotin deficiency possibly due to overload of parasites or an underlying metabolic condition.
Frizzie went on a protocol of filtered water with silver and apple cider vinegar, and her organic starter feed was supplemented with boiled egg yolk (biotin and B's), plain yogurt, and ditatomaceous earth. After four days the silver and diatomaceous earth were removed.
Her skin condition, mobility, color(for her), and interactivity greatly improved over the following two weeks and she started putting on weight a little faster but still cannot be considered normal or healthy. I tried removing the egg yolk, continued feeding filtered water with ACV and yogurt in food but the skin condition started to reemerge. This is not good because I can't continue to keep her separated from the rest of the flock to feed her a special diet for the rest of her life.
I have the question everyone has! Does anyone have any ideas about what this might be or a suggestion about what to try? The images attached are from when the skin condition was at its worst right before I started treatment. Her tiny comb has been coated with rooster booster because the other chicks had started picking on her when they started to get much bigger than her. She was separated from the flock into an adjacent grassy area shortly after this.