Christina, did your daughter kill that snake with branch loppers???
SpunkyChickenMom, that's bad karma stealing from a cop :-O
Cathie, I love that hoop house! That would be perfect for so many different uses.
Jim, all I gotta say is you might want to wear a disguise tomorrow so we don't recognize you lol
Me!!! Is she the one that took the Spitz chicks to the Newcastle auction, do you know?
Got back from the Stillwater vet. The guy who saw her is there filling in for a few wks at their Avian Clinic. He's an Avian Veterinarian teacher at Cornell-how cool is that? He said he's literally see thousands of chickens and does surgery on them on a regular basis. My little Faverolles pullet seems to have a wad of grass or straw (probably straw since it's in their pen) wadded up in her crop. He put her under and flushed out what he could but it was too big to pull up through her throat so she's scheduled for surgery Tues AM. I'm SO glad I didn't just do nothing and stuff grit and scratch down her til next week when the other vet wanted to see her back, she'd have probably died. The other vet did tell me he was at a loss though, I don't hold it against him. This Avian vet said it was at such an early stage that he could only barely smell anything once he'd pulled a bunch of gunk out of her crop. That's why the 1st vet couldn't find anything on his stains or under the microscope. He sent home antibiotics and some high calorie liquid food (that she loves). Some food is getting through her system because it's coming out the other end. Hopefully this high calorie liquid stuff will sustain her enough to keep her going til surgery, she's thin but not dangerously so at this point but surgery is 4 days away yet.
He was also telling the vet student what a wonderful breed Faverolles were and this was the perfect chicken breed for her introduction to chickens because they're so docile and easily handled
The little pullet just kept looking up at him and chirping like she was enamored with him lol
SpunkyChickenMom, that's bad karma stealing from a cop :-O
Cathie, I love that hoop house! That would be perfect for so many different uses.
Jim, all I gotta say is you might want to wear a disguise tomorrow so we don't recognize you lol
Was anyone on here looking for Spitzhauben ? I met a lady outside of Norman today that had all kinds of birds! She said she was not on BYC but someone else had told her she needed to be.
Me!!! Is she the one that took the Spitz chicks to the Newcastle auction, do you know?
She comes by it honest if she's kin to youMy Niece once was walking around me while I was telling something with her hand raised I stopped and asked "What are you doing?" she says "I'm trying to save my watch! It's too late for the boots!"

Got back from the Stillwater vet. The guy who saw her is there filling in for a few wks at their Avian Clinic. He's an Avian Veterinarian teacher at Cornell-how cool is that? He said he's literally see thousands of chickens and does surgery on them on a regular basis. My little Faverolles pullet seems to have a wad of grass or straw (probably straw since it's in their pen) wadded up in her crop. He put her under and flushed out what he could but it was too big to pull up through her throat so she's scheduled for surgery Tues AM. I'm SO glad I didn't just do nothing and stuff grit and scratch down her til next week when the other vet wanted to see her back, she'd have probably died. The other vet did tell me he was at a loss though, I don't hold it against him. This Avian vet said it was at such an early stage that he could only barely smell anything once he'd pulled a bunch of gunk out of her crop. That's why the 1st vet couldn't find anything on his stains or under the microscope. He sent home antibiotics and some high calorie liquid food (that she loves). Some food is getting through her system because it's coming out the other end. Hopefully this high calorie liquid stuff will sustain her enough to keep her going til surgery, she's thin but not dangerously so at this point but surgery is 4 days away yet.
He was also telling the vet student what a wonderful breed Faverolles were and this was the perfect chicken breed for her introduction to chickens because they're so docile and easily handled
