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A pendulous crop is one that hangs lower than it should, causing the food in the crop to have to go "up" in order to go "down". The crop is on the chickens right breast side. Check your other chickens. They should all have one, and it should feel somewhat firm when they have been eating, softer when they have been drinking, etc. At night, the crop should empty into the rest of the digestive tract (they stuff it before they go to bed, greedy little pigs!!!). In the morning, the crop should be pretty much FLAT.
If you have her isolated, and the crop is NOT going down overnight, it may be impacted or sour or both. Impaction is when something is blocking the path (wad of hay) and sour is when stuff starts to "rot" in the crop, causing a bad odor and usually a fungal infection (yeast). If it doesn't go down overnight and it feels full like it has a wad of something in it, or you can feel the hay, some olive oil might help you massage it down. If you massage it and she burps, it's probably sour, too. Put Apple Cider Vinegar in her water, 2 Tablespoons per gallon is the normal for maintenance drinking, but with a sour crop I'd give her 1/4 t. mixed in with a little water and just squirt directly down her throat.
BE CAREFUL squirting anything down a bird's throat - their breathing hole is under their tongue! You need to get something skinny enough to squirt way back in the throat, behind the tongue.
Let us know what you see with her crop overnight - good luck!
A pendulous crop is one that hangs lower than it should, causing the food in the crop to have to go "up" in order to go "down". The crop is on the chickens right breast side. Check your other chickens. They should all have one, and it should feel somewhat firm when they have been eating, softer when they have been drinking, etc. At night, the crop should empty into the rest of the digestive tract (they stuff it before they go to bed, greedy little pigs!!!). In the morning, the crop should be pretty much FLAT.
If you have her isolated, and the crop is NOT going down overnight, it may be impacted or sour or both. Impaction is when something is blocking the path (wad of hay) and sour is when stuff starts to "rot" in the crop, causing a bad odor and usually a fungal infection (yeast). If it doesn't go down overnight and it feels full like it has a wad of something in it, or you can feel the hay, some olive oil might help you massage it down. If you massage it and she burps, it's probably sour, too. Put Apple Cider Vinegar in her water, 2 Tablespoons per gallon is the normal for maintenance drinking, but with a sour crop I'd give her 1/4 t. mixed in with a little water and just squirt directly down her throat.
BE CAREFUL squirting anything down a bird's throat - their breathing hole is under their tongue! You need to get something skinny enough to squirt way back in the throat, behind the tongue.
Let us know what you see with her crop overnight - good luck!