Quote:
This is what I would do in a situation such as that described above and is what I'm trying to note...
I would take one or two of the 10 sick birds to the vet after isloating them and get a diagnosis, find out what treatments are available, and what I can do at home. If the illness is reasonably treatable...meaning easy, affordable and can be done at home, then I would do just that. If the illness is not reasonably treatable then they would be culled. Personaly I'd find someone with a large snake that can go for a chicken dinner, so long as the injury isn't infectious or abcessed or the illness malignant...(tumors and cancers).
For those that get better, they'd go back into the flock once they can. Those that weaken during treatment would get culled.
I'd also take preventative measures for the the rest of the flock.
I would find no sense at all to take all 10 sick birds to the vet. Spending $200 on one or two is worth the avoidance of losing the entire flock. If you have that many sick birds, then most likely the problems are the same in all of them.
Veterinary care is still a part of raising animals even when raising several livestock for service rather than companions and not all of us keep that many chickens...and it doesn't have to cost a fortune.
There are ways to get around vet bills and that is by learning how to treat at home with simple, easy to get to resources, but there's still some kind of consultation with a vet. Homeopathic or natural treatments and treating through cleanliness and nutrition are wonders and are very useful. So are forum boards like this one to find that information.
Chicken, dog, cat, parrot, pig, goat, duck, hell...even fish...lol...they are all blood pumping, air breathing critters just like we are. They don't ask really to be with us (though some do find their way over and just never leave
We choose to take them in and use them. Whether they cost $2 or $2000, if there's a problem and I can't figure it out, I will consult a vet whether the animal is a pet, food animal, or study subject. It doesn't mean I'm going to spend thousands of dollars on one problem. If treatments end up costing that much, then most likely treatment is worse than the illness and then euthanizing is the best choice at hand.
But as said in another post, people will have many different views on the subject. I see chickens as birds. Birds, IMO are never pets, but if we choose to keep them whether we have one or a million, we owe them the respect by seeing them for what they REALLY are...birds.
Just to note, the thread is fun so long as everyone gets along
It's all good.
This is what I would do in a situation such as that described above and is what I'm trying to note...
I would take one or two of the 10 sick birds to the vet after isloating them and get a diagnosis, find out what treatments are available, and what I can do at home. If the illness is reasonably treatable...meaning easy, affordable and can be done at home, then I would do just that. If the illness is not reasonably treatable then they would be culled. Personaly I'd find someone with a large snake that can go for a chicken dinner, so long as the injury isn't infectious or abcessed or the illness malignant...(tumors and cancers).
For those that get better, they'd go back into the flock once they can. Those that weaken during treatment would get culled.
I'd also take preventative measures for the the rest of the flock.
I would find no sense at all to take all 10 sick birds to the vet. Spending $200 on one or two is worth the avoidance of losing the entire flock. If you have that many sick birds, then most likely the problems are the same in all of them.
Veterinary care is still a part of raising animals even when raising several livestock for service rather than companions and not all of us keep that many chickens...and it doesn't have to cost a fortune.
There are ways to get around vet bills and that is by learning how to treat at home with simple, easy to get to resources, but there's still some kind of consultation with a vet. Homeopathic or natural treatments and treating through cleanliness and nutrition are wonders and are very useful. So are forum boards like this one to find that information.
Chicken, dog, cat, parrot, pig, goat, duck, hell...even fish...lol...they are all blood pumping, air breathing critters just like we are. They don't ask really to be with us (though some do find their way over and just never leave

But as said in another post, people will have many different views on the subject. I see chickens as birds. Birds, IMO are never pets, but if we choose to keep them whether we have one or a million, we owe them the respect by seeing them for what they REALLY are...birds.
Just to note, the thread is fun so long as everyone gets along
