I came home to find one of my Braden hens moping around the coop, she was very listless and seemed close to death. I immediately thought she was diseased. I picked her up and found out that she had prolapsed in a very, very bad way.
Her cloaca and other chicken insides were completely outside of her body and she was very bloody. I've delt with a prolapse before, one of my original hatchery Delawares prolapsed not too long after she reached POL. We were able to save that hen using Preparation H and pushing her cloaca/vent in but the hen I found today was much, much worse.
So we culled her. I do not think there would have been any way to fix her, it was a very bad prolapse. This is the first adult chicken I have ever culled and it was really hard.
I'm confused because I thought most instances of prolapse happen earlier in a birds life, typically around the time they start laying? This hen was a year old in May and has been laying without any problems until now.

Her cloaca and other chicken insides were completely outside of her body and she was very bloody. I've delt with a prolapse before, one of my original hatchery Delawares prolapsed not too long after she reached POL. We were able to save that hen using Preparation H and pushing her cloaca/vent in but the hen I found today was much, much worse.
So we culled her. I do not think there would have been any way to fix her, it was a very bad prolapse. This is the first adult chicken I have ever culled and it was really hard.
I'm confused because I thought most instances of prolapse happen earlier in a birds life, typically around the time they start laying? This hen was a year old in May and has been laying without any problems until now.