Next time one dies, send it off for a necropsy.We have 17 hens, 7 are Columbia Rocks and 10 are Red Rock Cross. One of the RRC hens has been acting lethargic for over a week now. I thought she might be egg-bound, and I could feel a lump in her abdomen, but I couldn't see anything. I separated her and gave her part of a TUMS tablet dissolved in water, because I read that calcium should help her pass the egg. I haven't seen her lay an egg in about a week though. Her vent is dirty, covered in poop, and she strains often but only gas comes out. I have been giving her Epsom salts dissolved in water as a laxative, to help her poo, but haven't seen any signs that it's working.
She will drink water from a syringe/dropper and from the waterer, but she doesn't want to eat any crumble. I've been giving her watery mash, but she only eats a little of that. I have also been giving her electrolyte water each morning, when she doesn't get enough to eat.
I've researched a lot, but I haven't been able to figure out what's wrong with her and what I should do to help her.
And today, I've noticed that her comb is looking a little purple at the ends... Not sure if that is part of what's wrong with her, or if it's something totally different...
We have had a lot of hens, and two roosters, die from various things (started with 25, down to 17 now). This is our first time having chickens, and we're still learning, so any and every piece of advice would be appreciated!
Thanks!
-Sunshine
State vets
Labs listed by state
This is how I send mine:
How to Send a Bird for a Necropsy
They need the whole bird, refrigerated, not frozen. If you live in CA there are four labs that do necropsies on poultry (chickens, turkeys, waterfowl) for free. I know that they do out of state necropsies, but I think they charge for those. You could call them and ask what they charge for out of state "backyard poultry". The lab I use is the one in Tulare, CA. If you are in CA, call them and ask for their FedEx account number, it will save a bunch on shipping charges.
CAHFS
18830 Road 112
Tulare, CA 93274-9042
(559) 688-7543
(559) 686-4231 (FAX)
[email protected]
The other labs are listed here:
http://www.cahfs.ucdavis.edu/services/lab_locations.cfm
If it's Friday, unless you want to overnight for Saturday delivery, I would suggest shipping on Monday for Tuesday delivery. What you need to do, if you haven't already done so, is put your bird in your refrigerator, NOT the freezer! Then you need to find a box, line it with styrofoam (I use the 4'x8'x1" stuff from Home Depot. You can also get smaller pieces at an art store like Michael's, but is way more expensive. Click here to see foam options. You'll also need at least one ice pack. Here are some pictures that I took of the last bird that I sent:
Box lined with foam on four sides and bottom. Seams of foam taped sealed.
Box, sides, bottom and and top.
Frozen ice pack in ziplock baggie.
Brown paper on top of ice pack.
Hen in ziplock baggie on top of brown paper.
Brown paper on top of hen.
Ice pack on top of brown paper.
Lid on top of brown paper.
Inside the box you should also include a submission form in a ziplock baggie. Do not tell anyone at FedEx that you're shipping a dead animal... that seems to really worry them. Just make sure that nothing will leak.
Hope this helps!
-Kathy