JPadronMiami
Songster
get some plastic water bottles fill em up and freeze them then add then to the water containers specially for the birds you still have outside, you can use the smaller water bottles and freeze them for the smaller containers, its been so hot and humid here lately its been the best thing I can do for my birds..... as well as put up a few fans facing down and towards the egg boxes, i covered the fans in hardware cloth in case the birds fly up on them to roost, it protects them and their feet. incidentally, i have a few smaller kiddie pools in the runs with fresh water and the chickens actually stand in the water to cool off their feet, keep us posted!
Sad news, I lost a 3 year old Rhode Island Red yesterday due 2 Heat Stroke (first time ever), we'd had a 104 degree Fahrenheit day the day prior, she was perfectly fine, weighed about 6 pounds, ate well, normal poop, good egg production, however when i arrived at the ranch yesterday I knew something was wrong with her, she was panting, wings away from her body, she seemed a bit disoriented, picked at her food, comb and wattles a bright red color, no poop issue, i picked her up to take her into the airconditioned family room, and she died during that process, the day prior she was perfectly fine, it took her in less than 24 hours, today I'm doubling up on the frozen water bottles to put in their water bins....Hope this helps you, and brings awareness to you and others that are reading this post, this heat wave is something serious...no joke, it has the ability to be fatal. the rest of the chickens seem fine as of this morning.I added some big fans outside where I wet the ground. flock sitter doesn’t appear to have sick birds. Some are exhibiting all the symptoms you mentioned and others are showing 1-2 of the symptoms.