I am absolutely brand new to silkies....and chickens.
I decided to buy 3 silkies at an animal auction last week. It was fun but I will never do it again, because you dont get to handle the birds before hand, there are hundreds of birds all in one place, I didnt know until after I had bought the birds that chickens can get and spread illnesses so easily and you have no idea where you get them from.
So I did it backwards, I bought birds and then started research. wrong move I know.
I ended up with two silkies that are sneezing. they have been staying in my garage separated from the others. one silkie rooster that appears to be healthy besides a little bit of lice and 3 OEB hens that also appear to be healthy.
I had no idea that chickens get sick so easily or I may not have gotten any of them. I am hoping for advice.
The more I read, about chicken illness, the more I seem to be confused.
I am hoping someone can give me some advice with their experience.
1. I brought 7 birds home separated by cages but in the car together. a 1.5 hour ride.
from everything I have read, it seems like since the two were sneezing, everyone else is going to end up diseased or sick.
I put the sneezing silkies in the garage, but my property is small and if it is something viral, than I dont see how just separating them is going to help. they are 10 feet from the other birds just inside the garage.
I started all the chickens on sulmet (in water) and put a cool mist humidifier with ACV in front of the sneezers.
i am careful not to over mist them.
I the black silkie stopped sneezing within two days but the white chicken is still sneezing and has a little mucus on his beak.
I was lucky enough to find out who the breeder was of these two and got her number. i told her the next day that her birds were sneezing and she said "that is the problem with auctions, they can catch anything". from what i have read, they would have had to of been sick before she took them to the auction. I am thinking about giving her back her chickens since she said she would take them. however it is a 2 hour drive to her house (one way)
what do you guys think? did i infect my whole flock with these two sneezing chickens? no one else is showing signs (so far)
should i attempt to mend them and hope they arent ->carriers<- ?
i have read that it is very hard to diagnose respiratory infections.
what should I do? does anyone have experience with this?
also....
how do you guys keep the poo off the feather on the feet?
This happens all too often. At least you don't have an existing flock to infect. Mycoplasma and coryza symptoms are brought on by the tress of travel and relocation, but they would have been infected before the sale. Your birds will more than likely survive but those that do will be carriers. The best you can do is treat them and run a ' closed flock '. That means no birds in , no birds out. Sorry that your first chicken experience has not been a good one.