I noticed one of my hens had a low-hanging crop yesterday. I brought her inside, made her vomit as much as possible, and then fashioned her a "crop bra" to keep her crop elevated. I was going to keep her on a 24 hour water-only fast (mixed with a tiny amount of baking soda), and then feed her yogurt for another 24 hours before putting her back outside.
Today, her crop feels empty and her poop looks normal. (Yesterday, her poops were very watery.) She flew onto a kitchen counter when I was in another part of the house, opened a bag of pretzels and began eating. I caught her, and hid the pretzels. Funny chicken.
Tonight, I was going to let her have some yogurt with some Nutri-Drench. I noticed online that people, once starting to feed their hens soft food again, were emptying the crops at night.
I'm curious about experiences here. Should the hen's crop be empty by the time night has fallen? I would think it would be empty by morning, and if not, that's when you would need to empty it yourself to make sure the food isn't just sitting there fermenting..
Today, her crop feels empty and her poop looks normal. (Yesterday, her poops were very watery.) She flew onto a kitchen counter when I was in another part of the house, opened a bag of pretzels and began eating. I caught her, and hid the pretzels. Funny chicken.
Tonight, I was going to let her have some yogurt with some Nutri-Drench. I noticed online that people, once starting to feed their hens soft food again, were emptying the crops at night.
I'm curious about experiences here. Should the hen's crop be empty by the time night has fallen? I would think it would be empty by morning, and if not, that's when you would need to empty it yourself to make sure the food isn't just sitting there fermenting..