Check your bottle and make sure how many tablets in a dose. It may be 2 tablets and that would be 250 mg. Usually, 300-600 mg is a good dose of calcium citrate for passing an egg, and some tablets have 620 mg. But again that may be 2 tablets.
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Thanks, it says 500mg calcium carbonate and its one tablet per day. I gave her 1 today and she's been drinking poultry tonic in her water all day. Eating almost nothing. A tiny amount of Greek yogurt, tiny bit of scrambled egg. Wouldn't eat any mashed feed. She did poop though since twice and did walk around a little gingerly this evening before bed. Then when I picked her up she threw up some fluid. Her vent looked clean and no more leakage as in the picture. I hope she is OK when I go out tomorrowCheck your bottle and make sure how many tablets in a dose. It may be 2 tablets and that would be 250 mg. Usually, 300-600 mg is a good dose of calcium citrate for passing an egg, and some tablets have 620 mg. But again that may be 2 tablets.
I will, thanks. She's a lovely little hen. We just don't seem to have access to the same medicines here in Ireland as you all do in America. It's really frustratingI would check her crop in early morning after she goes without food and water to make sure that her crop is emptying overnight.
Just wanted to thank you again. I was very concerned about giving her that tablet! It just looked too big. You gave me great confidence and it's another thing I've learned is possible with chickens600mg. Get one with vit D, that's needed to absorb the calcium. Pop the whole pill in her mouth, she can swallow it.
She's so much better this morning! Out with the others , her crop feels empty but when she is walking she crouches every now and then. I will continue to give the calcium and hope she can pass whatever else is blocked. I've put her back in the cage with more vitamin water and mashed feed which she is eating! This has REALLY made me think about the value of treats! Like I don't give them anything considered unhealthy so the only reason I can think of for this to happen is me feeding them too many treats and her not getting enough of what she actually needs. I think because of my family there's an element of oh when your great granny had chickens(prob around 30) they just got scraps(shared between 30) and in truth they clucked around a farm all day and nobody counted to see if all 30 came back! I'm going to really limit "treats" from now on and see how they do.I will, thanks. She's a lovely little hen. We just don't seem to have access to the same medicines here in Ireland as you all do in America. It's really frustrating
I'm so glad she's doing better. Keep up the calcium for about a week. Sometimes soft shells are just a glitch, or some hens just don't process calcium well, or it could be a sign of underlying, unknown issues. Hard to say what caused this. Do limit treats to 10% or less of total diet, and offer oyster shell on the side. Some hens prefer crushed eggshells instead, I offer both, free choice. Just keep an eye on her.