Sick hen please help!

caitlinmoe

Hatching
6 Years
Jun 23, 2013
7
0
7
Hi--I need help!!

Facts: I'm in Texas and it's about 95 degrees during the day right now, I only have 2 hens and they are best friends, they are about 9 months old and laying since January or so. This is my first time raising chickens and my first time with sick chickens. Janice is a Barred Rock and Ginger is an Orpington.

Yesterday I was out in the backyard around 10AM and noticed Janice (Barred Rock) was sitting in the sun and appeared very hot with her beak wide open. I went over to her thinking this was strange behavior. She moved a little but just wasn't herself. I took her into the shade and got her to drink some water. For a few hours all she would do is lay down and her head would droop and her eyes close. Then she would perk up and extended her neck, open her eyes and open her beak widely. This repeated for multiple hours. Meanwhile, we were able to get her to drink quite a bit of water with electrolytes and vitamins. She would not eat food at all. We also noticed runny/watery diarrhea.

Since it was really hot outside and she had her beak wide open at times, I decided to take her inside around 12PM. Inside the house, she fell asleep and appeared to have passed away except she remained breathing through the night. She did not eat or drink for the remainder of the day and through the night. Around 12AM I checked her vent area and noticed there was an egg stuck to her feathers so I pulled it out (it did not seem stuck inside her body, just her feathers--possibly from the diarrhea). She pooped 2 other times while in the house. Both times were watery but one had a little more substance and was green.

This morning I checked on her and she was still alive! She pooped again and this time it was thicker but still very runny with white and green color. Extremely smelly. She is opening her eyes more and stood up a few times but still is falling right back asleep. She drank a tiny bit of water but still isn't eating.

Meanwhile, her partner Ginger appears broody! Ever since Janice got sick, she's been sitting on her eggs and fluffs her feathers up and appears mad when I touch her. I do not think she has had any water or food since she's been sitting on the eggs for almost 24 hours. I've never seen this behavior from her. Is this because she's stressed from Janice being gone?

Any help or guidance is MUCH appreciated. I've been looking on the other forums about sick chickens and am just not sure what to do. It doesn't appear that she has the syndrome where eggs are stuck because she laid one last night--right?

Thanks again for any and all help!!

Caitlin
 
My guess is that she has poor tolerance to the heat. Texans on here report every year about the chickens they lose in the heat there. Some breeds tolerate it better than others. The main thing they need is shade, shade, shade. Cool water in low wide pans will help so they can step into it and cool their feet. When I have a chicken go broody I put little tuna/cat food cans with water and chicken feed in eat and set them near the broody in the nest box--most will drink the water. Broodies will get off their nest once or twice a day to eat, but it worries me in hot weather about dehydration. A fan in the coop and lots of windows help.
 
Greetings from Kansas, Caitlin, and
welcome-byc.gif
! Pleased you joined us! Sorry to hear about your sick hen - sounds like she's getting better, though. Cool water, shade, and breeze. Keep us posted!
 
welcome-byc.gif
You could get Misters that put up a fine spray of water, freeze gallon jugs of water and put about so the chickens can lay near them if they want.
 
My guess is that she has poor tolerance to the heat. Texans on here report every year about the chickens they lose in the heat there. Some breeds tolerate it better than others. The main thing they need is shade, shade, shade. Cool water in low wide pans will help so they can step into it and cool their feet. When I have a chicken go broody I put little tuna/cat food cans with water and chicken feed in eat and set them near the broody in the nest box--most will drink the water. Broodies will get off their nest once or twice a day to eat, but it worries me in hot weather about dehydration. A fan in the coop and lots of windows help.

Thank you so much. I like your suggestions and put some small dishes of water and food near the broody hen. I'm not sure if she's touched it. It seems interesting that the minute her partner in crime (the one other hen I have) became ill she became broody. Is this something others have noticed? Thank you so much.
 
Thank you all and sorry for posting this in "New Members". I am new and didn't realize where I was posting!
 

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