- Jan 30, 2009
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I think, and this is only my opinion, that when a bird is stressed and maybe its just not as healthy as the rest of the flock, say it has more worm load, etc. the heat will kill it faster than a healthier bird. When I find a bird suddenly dead, and pick it up, if it is thin and light, then something has been going on for a long time for it to have lost weight like that. We don't notice them because the feathers cover up the thinness and unless they are acting odd enough to notice, we usually don't see something is going on until its too late.Morning all. Woke up to two dead chicks and a dead hen. The hen was a red sexlink in the terrorist coop. Found her lying on the floor of the coop next to the feed bucket. No apparent cause of death. Was fine yesterday. The chicks were also fine yesterday. I examined the others. They are running around with momma. However, the splash hen in the coup is not looking good. She was fine yesterday but was hiding in a nest box this morning. I remember that someone else on this forum was having chickens drop dead for no reason and was having their birds looked at by cornell. Did you ever get an answer? My other hens in the terrorist coop seemed quite disturbed by their dead sister. No predators got in. I checked. I will isolate my silkie hen today. I am reluctant to give any kind of anitbiotic without knowing what the problem is. Everyone else looks fine. They are out and about doing chicken things. Ugh...I hate the not knowing part.
Its rare that I find a "heavy" bird in good weight suddenly dead. Especially a hen. When I find a suddenly dead rooster like that, then its most likely a heart attack.
Unless you do a necropsy, you will never really know.
And in the end, chickens die suddenly like that. We can't prevent them all. Just hope they enjoyed the life that you provided for them.
I would bet it is the heat. Last year with the heat we had, I lost more birds than ever. It was a tough summer.