Newchickenowner 2020
In the Brooder
- May 7, 2020
- 22
- 13
- 47
Hi everyone,
Feeling a bit overwhelmed with trying to manage the health of my two beloved chickens and could really use some advice here.
I've just lost one of my two pet chickens (a silkie named Edna) and the other one (a polish bantam named Gladys) is currently at the vets under observation. I'm absolutely devastated to have lost the first one who we found hiding in a bush on one of the really hot days last week here in the UK (it was about 34 degrees when we first noticed her getting sick.) I rushed her to the vet and they gave me antibiotics and recommended giving her 20 mg of water a day alongside baby food using a pipette. In addition, I broke up antibiotics and gave her one pill a day by placing them in her beak. She seemed to get worse and worse and was very weak, lethargic and not eating and drinking. I took her back 3 days later but the vets called me the following morning to say she had died. Totally heartbroken, I didn't realise I would cry this much over a chicken!
We rushed the polish hen to the vets the second she lost her appetite and seemed to be sitting in unusual places, like corners. They suspected an infection passed from Edna and injected her with antibiotics over a few days and she seems to be doing better. I'm going through everything I could have done to have saved Edna but I I thought she was trying to stay out of the sun when she was really just taking herself away because she was sick. I assumed she would be drinking and left pots of water around the garden for easy access but I now realise she hadn't been drinking. I suspect the extreme heat caused severe dehydration before the virus even took hold... So my two questions are:
1) Was there anything I could have done to have prevented this in the first place?
2) I've quickly found 2 new hens to keep Gladys company. I will be quarantining them in a separate pen which I wiped down with antibacterial solution (I also sprayed and rinsed the eglu, water feeder and pen for Gladys when she comes back.) I will keep the new girls there for a week as the vet advised that the bacteria in the environment should have died by then and won't be transmissible. But I'm worried, is there any chance my two new girls might pick up the same thing? And is there any chance that Gladys might get sick again even though she's been treated?
It feels a bit daunting - I was so worried about predators, I have to admit I was shocked to find an infection would kill Edna so quickly...
Thanks so much and sorry for the long post!
Feeling a bit overwhelmed with trying to manage the health of my two beloved chickens and could really use some advice here.
I've just lost one of my two pet chickens (a silkie named Edna) and the other one (a polish bantam named Gladys) is currently at the vets under observation. I'm absolutely devastated to have lost the first one who we found hiding in a bush on one of the really hot days last week here in the UK (it was about 34 degrees when we first noticed her getting sick.) I rushed her to the vet and they gave me antibiotics and recommended giving her 20 mg of water a day alongside baby food using a pipette. In addition, I broke up antibiotics and gave her one pill a day by placing them in her beak. She seemed to get worse and worse and was very weak, lethargic and not eating and drinking. I took her back 3 days later but the vets called me the following morning to say she had died. Totally heartbroken, I didn't realise I would cry this much over a chicken!
We rushed the polish hen to the vets the second she lost her appetite and seemed to be sitting in unusual places, like corners. They suspected an infection passed from Edna and injected her with antibiotics over a few days and she seems to be doing better. I'm going through everything I could have done to have saved Edna but I I thought she was trying to stay out of the sun when she was really just taking herself away because she was sick. I assumed she would be drinking and left pots of water around the garden for easy access but I now realise she hadn't been drinking. I suspect the extreme heat caused severe dehydration before the virus even took hold... So my two questions are:
1) Was there anything I could have done to have prevented this in the first place?
2) I've quickly found 2 new hens to keep Gladys company. I will be quarantining them in a separate pen which I wiped down with antibacterial solution (I also sprayed and rinsed the eglu, water feeder and pen for Gladys when she comes back.) I will keep the new girls there for a week as the vet advised that the bacteria in the environment should have died by then and won't be transmissible. But I'm worried, is there any chance my two new girls might pick up the same thing? And is there any chance that Gladys might get sick again even though she's been treated?
It feels a bit daunting - I was so worried about predators, I have to admit I was shocked to find an infection would kill Edna so quickly...
Thanks so much and sorry for the long post!