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Niwatori hen
In the Brooder
Thank you for the infoMaybe this can help.....

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Thank you for the infoMaybe this can help.....
Yes, good news about the crop! Keep monitoring her crop to see if it empties after eating her bits of food. She isn't feeling good, so she needs the rest. You will know what to do and when. Trust your judgement and do your best. You are not a vet, but she is lucky to have you helping her.
These are the questions that worry keepers. To force feed, or not? I would first try to entice the chicken to eat. Serve up something tasty and moist. Don't over do it, serve small amounts at a time, in a little dish, like a cat dish. Serve about 3 different things for the chicken to eat. You have to keep putting the food in front of her.
The bread ball has a bit of nutrition and calories, and if she is eating watermelon that is good. Let her rest for now. I like to offer cooked mini-meals. Balanced meals of Carbohydrates: cooked grains (Brown rice, barley, oat groats, etc.), cooked pasta, cooked potato grated, minced or mashed, cooked corn minced, fresh vegetables: diced up small (greens, cucumber, tomato, etc.), Cooked vegetables diced small or mashed, Fruit: juicy fresh fruit diced small, applesauce, Soft easy to digest Protein: cooked egg or tofu, baby food beef.
Cooked foods are easily digested for the sick chicken, and dicing or mincing the foods allows the sick chicken to eat smaller portions. Sometimes, keepers give large pieces of food, but the chicken knows it can only swallow tiny amounts at a time. So even though it may be hungry, it will not pick up large pieces of food. Plus, larger pieces of food require a lot of effort to break apart.
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You can also prepare a mushy meal to see if she will eat that. Some chickens will eat chicken mash with some warm water. They will even get excited if you dribble a little water onto the mash.
Feel your hen's keel bone (the bone on the chest). If it feels like a blade, she is losing muscle, and is probably losing weight. If you can't tell whether she hast lost weight, it's good to weigh the chicken. And check the average standard weight for her breed.
If she refuses all efforts to get her to eat on her own, you may have to force feed her with an oral syringe. You can purchase baby bird formula at a pet store, and feed her with that. It's formulated to be used with an oral syringe. And is basically pulverized grains, protein, and some seed, vitamins and minerals, and probiotics.
I hope this information has been helpful.
God Bless![]()
Not sure, but I'd cut out the herby stuff to see if it improves.How can I care for her when she has bad diarrhoea like this?
Ok, I'll not give her the herbs tomorrow and see. Thanks.Not sure, but I'd cut out the herby stuff to see if it improves.
Antibiotics might be causing it too.
I hope she recovers well. We all make mistakes, please don't beat yourself up over it. Just to encourage her to cough and clear the liquid. I'm not sure how to do that. But you've reached out to some very knowledgeable people on this site. Prays for her recoveryThank you very much for the link.
I've never lived together with chickens before and have almost no knowlege. It was very difficult to open her beak and I rushed to do it which I shouldn't. I feel extremely sorry for her.
Thanks you for your messageI hope she recovers well. We all make mistakes, please don't beat yourself up over it. Just to encourage her to cough and clear the liquid. I'm not sure how to do that. But you've reached out to some very knowledgeable people on this site. Prays for her recovery❤
Leave them out until a week after the AB's are done.Ok, I'll not give her the herbs tomorrow and see. Thanks.
Sure. Thanks!Leave them out until a week after the AB's are done.