- Jan 10, 2011
- 4
- 0
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We live in the currently very very wet gold coast of australia and have been happy keepiing six lovely healthy ladies who after some early drama with eagles have settled in happily.
We wanted to extend our flock and our pen and looked on gumtree for anyone who was selling hens. A local lady was selling her seven girls as she couldnt care for them any more with here health issues.
We turned up just to look at them, but the poor things were in such a state that we had to take them and care for them as it was likely that noone else would want them.
They have hardly any feathers, they have raw red patches from pecking themselves and each other and of course they have bloody lice.
Of course we have to seperate them from our other girls, i spend a very horrible day (in the torrential rain) dunking them in an antiseptic bath, a clean bath and dusting them with lice powder before crawling into and scrubbing the hutch. Joy.
So now i am at a bit of a loss - the weather conditions mean they are not able to go out much, but i want to do everything to give them the best chance of rapid healing and recovery. They are eating and laying and their combs are up so i know it is not a lost cause.
Any tips from anyone who has been in a similar situation, or ideas on if i should worm them or feed them anything in particular.
thank you all, Cat
We wanted to extend our flock and our pen and looked on gumtree for anyone who was selling hens. A local lady was selling her seven girls as she couldnt care for them any more with here health issues.
We turned up just to look at them, but the poor things were in such a state that we had to take them and care for them as it was likely that noone else would want them.
They have hardly any feathers, they have raw red patches from pecking themselves and each other and of course they have bloody lice.
Of course we have to seperate them from our other girls, i spend a very horrible day (in the torrential rain) dunking them in an antiseptic bath, a clean bath and dusting them with lice powder before crawling into and scrubbing the hutch. Joy.
So now i am at a bit of a loss - the weather conditions mean they are not able to go out much, but i want to do everything to give them the best chance of rapid healing and recovery. They are eating and laying and their combs are up so i know it is not a lost cause.
Any tips from anyone who has been in a similar situation, or ideas on if i should worm them or feed them anything in particular.
thank you all, Cat