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Good day my fellow friends who are loves and adored by out feathered friens... anyone have any suggesting about keeping pollitas (spanish) cool in 80+ degrees weather....at night it's in the 50's and they stay in the coop under the heat lams, quite comfortable... they actually look quite comfortable in the day, is that because they are so young? Also, i make sure they have chick meal all day long and have been supplementing with chicken scratch, they really go for it....it is aproppiate to feed them all day long?? They also love mushed banana...a little treat only once in a while ... Thank you all!
Welcome to the Texas forum watch out these people will not talk you out of getting more chickens.
Hey, you better take it easy Missy!! And No beer for you unless it has root in front of it! lolI was a bad mommy today. I over did it out in the yard, didn't realize I got to hot until I fainted. I was clearing fence line for the runs. Got about 300ft done... Did I mention I hate Yaupon? DF has me sitting on the couch with a cold rag, water, and a fan on me. Told me not to go back outside today. He even did the dishes... I must of looked bad. :-/
I was only out there for three or four hours in that hot sun, normally I can do it all day. Guess I was more tired than I realized after shopping this morning? :shrug
The babies spent some time outside too. They followed me down the fence as I got it stretched and up in a little portable chick-letter-outer-thingy I made out of the puppy play pen. Haha.
Guess I have to sit back and do nothing this evening. I'm not even allowed to go put the horses up. He says its not gonna hurt to let them graze in the rain, yeah right!! They'll tear the pasture up!
I need a beer. Maybe this Dr pepper will hold me over instead?
Did I mention Lyle is a ginormous rooster?! He's as tall as my wheel barrow....
Diamond T Poultry out in Seguin! Nice gentleman too,really knows his chickens.Ooooooh...where'd you get them from?
No, I don't think chickens haven't gotten weaker. I didn't cull when she first got sick and I didn't let her die. If I hadn't taken them to the vet they would most certainly have died in February when their crop was a mass of putrid, rotting hay. For three days every morning I went into the garage expecting one or both birds to be dead. They were skin and bones.
Because I took them to an avian vet, I was able to effectively treat the blockage.
They might never have had a blockage if any of the following hadn't have happened:
1) I gave them antibiotics which probably upset the balance of their flora in their crop. Why did they get antibiotics? I'm telling you these health issues with these two Ameraucana hens is a whole cascade of things. They got antibiotics because a new bird I bought coughed when I opened the shipping box (not uncommon from lack of ventilation during shipping). Two days later we had that wicked cold front with bitter temps and 35mph winds from the north so I closed up the coop too tightly and a few of my chickens coughed the next day. Was it disease from the new bird that was in quarantine, or from poor ventilation? I didn't take chances and put everyone on antibiotics for five days.
2) I separated them from the free range flock (and cockerels) to get them into show condition for the two shows I went to in March. They were not happy to be in the bare garden so ate hay in their coop and blocked their crop, causing a compost heap in their crop.
3) They were put on Nystatin, an anti fungal since the antibiotics needed to be given in very sweet water setting up the perfect environment for a yeast overgrowth.
4) Once the crop was mostly unblocked and sweet smelling, the Nystatin didn't deal with the gassy crop so we tried another tact--acidify the crop with apple cider vinegar in the water. I think that made the crop more gassy. I believe whatever organisms had made her crop gassy were acid loving ones, so I just made it all worse. Of course, when you are doing a treatment (under vet's instructions) you have to give it time to work.
5) That didn't do anything and in fact made everything worse--poor hen would sit on my lap while she tried to burp it out--and she aspirated on some crop contents that came up with the gas.
6) Now we tried a different tact, again, and took away the acid environment and the crop returned to normal. She also is getting antibiotic treatment to try to prevent aspiration pneumonia, a huge risk for her after she aspirated some of her crop contents.
So, how much of all my health problems with this poor sweet little hen were 100% caused by me?
I think this hen is as tough as nails to still be alive to be honest.
Hubby is out of town, watching. I would be watching, but we don't have tv. That last team from the Big 12 is dh's and my alma mater!The last team of the Big 12 is about to take the floor but I am afraid this is a Little 1.
Are you watching, Hens? or you wait till tomorrow to see Baylor Big Mamas?![]()
Oh! Lovingmyhens, I emailed a lady who runs a little hobby ranch about the BCMs. And she only has chicks :/ She said she had a waiting list for pullets but wasn't sure how long it was.