I'll be watching them closely. I looked at every "body" this morning when I fed and none of them have broken or picked feathers. Hopefully it won't happen again. If it does and I can locate the instigator, it will die.
Ugh, so sorry, it so disturbing when they do nasty stuff to each other.
I'm having a similar problem right now and have found my offenders but I'm not sure what to do because it is all of my polish hens.
Over winter they just decided to stop going outside. We didn't even have snow so it wasn't that, maybe a predator scared them? Either way they spend all day inside and I think this is stemming from boredom. I even moved the food and water outside for two days and I had to carry them outside from them to eat and drink and then they would go straight back in. I then locked everyone out for an entire day and put a nest box outside. Still only one has started going out for short periods of time. Now we are getting constant rain so I'm really losing the battle.
Mostly they are giving the broody girls haircuts but they have made my two four month olds pullets bleed in that exact same spot. (Separated and feathering back in nicely) So now I'm giving one broody some of my pb ameraucana eggs and really want to not have to worry about them with the chicks. The rest of my flock is great with chicks.
So I've tried so far...
Forcing them to be outside and not bored - might work if they would stay out side.
Separating them from the flock - they do this to each other instead.
Separating their victims - they attacked them again as soon as I put them back.
Upped protein percentage in feed - no change.
Bought "Stop-Pick" - opened jar, it was red, didn't even bother.
Added more leaves and mixed in sprouts and hung lettuce - amused them for a few hours
Possibilities to try...
Keep booting them outside,
Animal protein (though really certain this is a learned habit stemming from boredom)
Pinless Peepers??? Had anyone used these?
Cull all my polish?
