- Thread starter
- #131
Sunshine Flock
Crowing
Change of heart about removing Henry's scabs.
When he pulls at the scabs, he could tear his tender, healing skin and the periphery of large wounds. So I've started trimming them with scissors, just down to within a quarter inch of where they're attached.
He already pulled off some sizable scabs, probably because they're itchy. But I have a feeling the air flow to his wounds is part of the healing process. Maybe he has chicken intuition and heard a wee little voice whispering in a feathered ear flap, that said, "Get them things off of your skin, boy!"
Most of the deep reddish brown edges around all of the wounds in the above photos are scabs. Only the outer edges of the large wounds are scabbing; the smaller ones are completely covered and starting to break open and peel off.
And the depth of his wounds is really beginning to fill in with new tissue. Remarkable is the word of the day for me.
When he pulls at the scabs, he could tear his tender, healing skin and the periphery of large wounds. So I've started trimming them with scissors, just down to within a quarter inch of where they're attached.
He already pulled off some sizable scabs, probably because they're itchy. But I have a feeling the air flow to his wounds is part of the healing process. Maybe he has chicken intuition and heard a wee little voice whispering in a feathered ear flap, that said, "Get them things off of your skin, boy!"
Most of the deep reddish brown edges around all of the wounds in the above photos are scabs. Only the outer edges of the large wounds are scabbing; the smaller ones are completely covered and starting to break open and peel off.
And the depth of his wounds is really beginning to fill in with new tissue. Remarkable is the word of the day for me.