Quote: I do think the whitewash will work for you if you can get the eggs in the crevices taken care of.
Are the mites you are seeing black, white, or red?
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Quote: I do think the whitewash will work for you if you can get the eggs in the crevices taken care of.
Are the mites you are seeing black, white, or red?
try this:
http://www.the-chicken-chick.com/2014/07/flystrike-in-backyard-chickens-causes.html
or basically clean by soaking and removing as much dead skin and all maggots. I wouldn't hesitate to use nustock, or if you don't have it, sulfur powder mixed with a balm base such as bag balm, vaseline, coconut oil, etc. Isolate and repeat as needed. If there is a docile hen you could add as a buddy, I would do that after a few days and only on a day when I could keep an eye to make sure there was no picking. Depending on the wound you could also spray with bluekote before adding a buddy. Add lots of pecking targets to the isolation cage/area so the buddy has lots of things to peck at beside the sick hen. (scratch in the bedding might work too).
I wouldn't cull as I would wonder if the tail was a result of the dead skin/infection/maggots....
also would do good inspection of vent areas on all your flock....
good luck
and pics?
Quote:
I do think soaking would be good. The article that lala posted talked about the soaking too. I'd just use a bucket of warm water w/epsom salt. That should soften things up some and then you'll have to remove the maggots. One thing to really look at well - have they gone up into the vent. If they have, it can be almost impossible to take care of the whole infestation.
From your anatomy description and her age, I think I'd also question if she will be able to lay freely. And it does sound like you've had some problems with her over time...she's so young...
I'd probably be thinking the same thing as you about culling even though I always hold out hope.
Oh...and with the number of birds you have, I guess you have to weigh if it is something you want to spend time on in the light of the apparent health of the rest of the flock. In a perfectly natural situation (not in human captivity) this bird would likely not have survived as long as it has.
I'm curious...do the others single her out to ostracize at all?
I certainly hope that you don't let someone else's opinion flavor your decision to cull vs treat. It's way too easy for someone to sit on the sideline and dispense advice based on THEIR husbandry practices, and their view of chickens as pets vs livestock. There is no one size fits all answer for poultry health issues. I wish you the best.