Quote:Quote: I agree not to trim anything. I've even seen some birds that had black wattles end up pinking up and becoming normal again in the spring.
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Quote:Quote: I agree not to trim anything. I've even seen some birds that had black wattles end up pinking up and becoming normal again in the spring.
Last spring one of my EEs, Charlie's Sister, was COMPLETELY bare backed on the area that is just above the tail - almost half her back bare to the skin. It was so bare that I was concerned about sunburn...and it looked dry too. This was presumably from the rooster.
This is Charlie's Sister today. When molt time came, she grew in new feathers after having been completely bare back there from June - October!
ETA: No apron applied...thought I thought about it!
Did her feathers come back in after molt?I put an apron on one bare girl one time, but it wouldn't stay on, so I just gave up on the idea.
Last spring one of my EEs, Charlie's Sister, was COMPLETELY bare backed on the area that is just above the tail - almost half her back bare to the skin. It was so bare that I was concerned about sunburn...and it looked dry too. This was presumably from the rooster.
This is Charlie's Sister today. When molt time came, she grew in new feathers after having been completely bare back there from June - October!
ETA: No apron applied...thought I thought about it!
Cover the blood with Blue Kote.Well, I get another award for bad chicken keeper.
Went out to give a late afternoon feeding because it is cold and Seaquist hopped up on me and I noticed some blood spots on her feathers - not her blood. So I looked around and discovered poor Angelina.
Angelina is the skittish icelandic with the scalped comb from chickhood, blind in one eye and misformed wing. She had a bloody scalp wound and as soon as I picked her up, Amelia jumped up on my arm and started pecking at the blood. So I put her in the brooder cage, cleaned up the blood and when trying to keep her in the brooder, accidentally closed the door on her toe. It is getting dark and I couldn't see that her toe was in the way. SHe didn't make a sound, and I didn't realize what happened until after I had put nustock on her comb and cleaned the bloodclot off her nostril - picked her up and fed her meal worms and saw this pool of blood.
Finally figured out it was her toe. It had stopped bleeding, poor baby. My headlamp went out, and I decided to leave her be in the brooder, she wanted out badly but I don't want the others to pick on her and there was still alot of activity in the coop - not everyone was roosting yet.
What the heck am I going to do with her tomorrow? I don't know what happened, maybe a rooster grabbed her and tore her scalp/whats left of her comb. I leave for work in the dark, so can't observe....
- I don't have a way to give her water in the brooder cage , it will freeze.
- bad planning, the dog kennel is snowed in - inside the shed and not accessible, so I have no where to put her in the house.
So...
- I could put her on her roost in the dark in the morning and hope for the best during the day
To make matters worse, with the rooster hormones kicking in, Buster is getting more intolerant of Booster and tried to keep him out of the coop tonight. I just happened to be home at the right time to see it. I should have planned better - gotten electric to the little coop so the water wouldn't freeze, then I could put Booster and a few hens in there. Yikes!
I think I have some bluekote....but how to keep it out of her eyes is a mystery.