Sour Crop. What You Need to Know. DON'T WAIT!!!

Preservation Acres

Songster
11 Years
Dec 31, 2008
782
10
141
Murfreesboro, TN
Two days ago, one of my hens refused to leave the coop, had low energy, and I noticed that her crop was swollen and seemed to be filled with fluid.

It took me three days, but today, I finally figured out what the problem was, but three days with this problem finally killed her.

I'm posting the info I found on the web about "Sour Crop" below. This is what she had and how it can be treated if you find it early enough.


Sour Crop: the hard facts

The Chook Doctor explains:

[Sour Crop] is a common problem with hens, especially if they are allowed to graze on grass when they are first released. These birds are not used to eating such natural foods, so they tend not to know how to do it properly. Long strands of grass in the crops of such birds often are unable to pass through the digestive system, [so they] bind in the crop and ferment.

A quick method of telling whether a chicken has Sour Crop or not is to gently squeeze it and sniff the air that’s expelled from its mouth. If the bird has Sour Crop then the air will smell awful, if not… well, I don’t suppose a chicken smells very nice anyway, but apparently la différence d’odeur is marked. (Of course, sniffing chickens is also one of the eight sure-fire ways of being marked down as a looney, but we’ll put that aside for the moment.)

Fear not, help is at hand

Luckily for you my mother has a cure for Sour Crop. First she grabs you (this isn’t hard because you’re just lying there burping), then she sticks a tube down your throat, and pours a mixture of yogurt and olive oil into you.

That done, she takes hold of your feet, hangs you upside down, and massages your stomach and crop until lots of green and white muck comes pouring out of you.

Finally she flips you the right way up, pats you on the head, and puts you down. You ruffle your feathers, squawk a bit, ruffle your feathers some more, and then walk off in as dignified a manner as you can muster.

It’s a tough life, being a chicken.
 
PLEASE be careful when sticking anything down chickens throat that you do not enter windpipe and fill their lungs!

First call of action should be massage for impaction or organic apple cider vinegar/ anti-biotics/ anti-fungal for sour.

LOTS of GREAT info on this site. Miss Prissy also has great advice!

I am sorry for your loss and glad you decided to educate others!
 

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