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Ok man I hope its the first part , she is sneezing a bit and also I had just put fine pine shavings down a few days ago but I just done my best to remove themSounds like stridor, which is a partial obstruction of the airway. It's often a bit of feed or something, stuck, and will resolve on it's own with a bit of time. I've also have birds do it when they get overheated sometimes, probably from minor swelling, and it resolved when they cooled off. If it does not resolve on it's own then you would need to consider possible respiratory illness. She looks pretty healthy, so I would just give her some time and see if it resolves. It usually sounds worse than it is.
EDIT - video is showing up above rather than below, but I found it.![]()
I went to put her back with the others and realized she's alos sneezing a bit especially when she gets excitedX2, it sounds like stridor. I had a hen who would do this after literally inhaling her feed. It usually cleared in a few hours. They can usually cough or shake their heads to clear their airway. Let us know if this goes away by morning.
Ok thank you all so very much ! Will update in the morning...See how she is in the morning. Some sneezing could be from dust or irritants. If you see any discharge from beak, nares or eyes, bubbles in the eyes, any facial swelling, plaques or lesions in the mouth or throat those are common symptoms of respiratory diseases. Chickens do cough or sneeze on occasion, just like us. When it's persistent or accompanied by others symptoms, then it's a concern. I used to have a hen that had a sneezing fit every time she ate, she was a pig, and inhaled it. Every. Single. Time.
I was thinking the same@coach723 would it be advisable to keep her separated until it's determined whether or not it's a respiratory infection?
I'd be concerned with putting her back with the flock prematurely.
Personally, I'd keep her seperated for a day or so. I'd prefer to deal with reintegrating, if necessary, than risking the whole flock getting sick.I was thinking the same