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- #231
Sunshine Flock
Crowing
I stopped isolating Hortense from Henry a few days ago. He does his Spanish dance whenever she approaches or someone tries to bully him, and usually the hens back down.you and henry have grown very close through this journey. I do believe it is possible to become so connected to another being that you reach a kind of resonance. it is rarely talked about in medicine and caregiving but it's very real. to help your patient get through the labyrinth of life threatening challanges, you've had to get in it's head and know his feelings intimately. I'd say enjoy the process, keep making discoveries and writing about it and at some point henry will need to return to the coop and I think he is getting there. as a "practitioner" you will need to re-individuate from him, it's part of the caregiving process, important to him regaining his independence. this is an important prorgression for both you and him. you are going to want to consciously begin returning to your normal daily activities, sleeping in your own bed etc. and allowing henry to stay in the coop with the hens more and more. Once he can roost, I'd start by giving him coop time in the late afternoon and seeing if he goes to roost with the others. if you are still worried about what hortense might do in the morning, then I'd go back in later and take him inside to roost alone until you are sure he can fend for himself. you and Henry will always have a special bond, don't worry about losing that, but for him to return to being king of the coop, he needs to be nudged "out of the nest".
No one has pecked his legs since, but they do sometimes nibble his feathers. They're curious as to why his feathers are chopped in half and in places clearcut. But they can no longer see any of his upper body wounds and are showing no indication of remembering they're there.
Henry hopped inside the chicken coop yesterday without any prompting or help, and then he jumped out through the chicken door and settled in a patch of pine needles and leaves in the run and rested with the hens.
It has been getting near freezing at night lately. Henry's feathers are growing in quickly, but I'd like to see more downy under-feathers before he spends a night outside and more healing on his right leg. He's getting there, so it's possible he could be reunited with his flock at night in the next two weeks or so.
Henry's room is actually my husband's bedroom waiting for a makeover. I'm hoping to have Henry in the coop and the husband in his own bedroom by Christmas, but only if I feel Henry is ready.