Looks like I have another... This one has "curly toe Marek's" and "drunk Marek's" He can still walk, sort of...
-Kathy
-Kathy
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I'm sorry Kathy
Farmgirl - yes, it can show up later in life. Stress of molting can also seem to make the mareks show up from what I've been told here. As for my 3 losses they have not had stinky diarrhea so I don't know about that.
Asking again - does anyone know if mareks can cause wry neck? my d'uccle pullet seems to have it. I can feel the bend in her neck. She always sits fluffed up, even when I bring her in for her medicine. Doesn't seem to want to walk a lot either. my experience so far with chickens is awful. I give them vitamins always in the water so I have trouble thinking it's a vitamin e deficiency. But I'm treating with it. ughhhhhhh
I would first make a mad dash and check all the things they could eat, and make sure that nothing is nasty. You may want to toss the feed and get a new bag. Eating something toxic can give symptoms like Marek's. Next I would put them on super B vitamins. I did find nutritional yeast flakes on amazon that was loaded with B vitamins. That's what I'm using. I would also get a necropsy to end the guessing. So far mine usually look happy as a clam while they're wasting away. It could be Marek's but I would be searching for something else as well.Hi! I just had a girl die, and it sounds like she might have Marek's. I have a laying flock of 37 hens and 2 roosters of mixed heritage breeds that are pastured with a mobile coop. The one that died was a white leghorn and about 22 months old. I noticed that she hadn't been eating much and was just standing around when the others were foraging. Then on Wednesday she didn't come out of the coop so I picked her up and noticed that her bottom was crusted over with poop, her comb and wattle were also pale and dry looking. I gave her a bath and fed her yogurt and water with ACV. She was happy to eat, but couldn't seem to move her one leg. I put her in the (dry) bathtub overnight with towels and she had terrible diarrhea that smelled really bad. She also had a purplish spot that grew on her comb. The next day I put her in a separate shed with a heat lamp. She wasn't able to walk and died two days later. When I found her her legs were splayed to the front and back. She didn't appear to have any respiratory issues. Now taking a look at my other girls their combs don't seem that healthy. Most of them are going through a partial molt. 25 of them were hatched this February, 6 I bought as ready to lay pullets in May, and the other 6 were from my first batch of chicks from February of 2012. When they were chicks I didn't have any unexplained deaths. Can Marek's show up this late in their life or should I be looking for something else? Thanks!
I've had all ages, most of them being under 8 months old, but quite a few over that. Most have not even looked sick, even if paralyzed, they have a happy face. One of my roos was 18 months old, the paralysis went up to where he couldn't even control his neck, he had a gray eye, and weighed almost nothing, and still crowed in the morning!!!!!I'm sorry Kathy
Farmgirl - yes, it can show up later in life. Stress of molting can also seem to make the mareks show up from what I've been told here. As for my 3 losses they have not had stinky diarrhea so I don't know about that.
Asking again - does anyone know if mareks can cause wry neck? my d'uccle pullet seems to have it. I can feel the bend in her neck. She always sits fluffed up, even when I bring her in for her medicine. Doesn't seem to want to walk a lot either. my experience so far with chickens is awful. I give them vitamins always in the water so I have trouble thinking it's a vitamin e deficiency. But I'm treating with it. ughhhhhhh