Time is Of the Essence: Advice on AI from Deceased Rooster (yes, that's what I said)

Our thoughts are with you during this time of grief and sadness.....

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Please, Speckled, keep us informed on any success for progeny.
 
So sorry to hear about Suede, He is just so gorgeous and I'm sure has brought you much joy, I hope his passing is peaceful and the memories will out weigh the sorrow.
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In time.

Our thoughts are with you during this time of grief and sadness.....

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Please, Speckled, keep us informed on any success for progeny.

Thank you both. I appreciate it. He's a special guy.
 
I have never heard of this, but am interested to know if it would work.

I am so very sorry to hear about his condition. :( He is such a beautiful boy. Please keep us updated.
 
The history of this:

He went down fast. During the hottest week of summer, still not really that hot, his crow sounded a bit weaker. Thought he was just having a bit of heat stress and he'd get his big howling crow back. He never did.

Then, he was sleeping more and more, going to roost before his hens, nodding off at the drop of a hat. His color would go dark, then recover. He was in molt, so at first, his small weight loss wasn't unusual, but a couple of weeks ago, it was much worse and now, he has very little meat on his keel. His color stayed dark and the comb was withering, points curling over, so I figured his big old heart was slowly failing. Still, he was crowing every day, albeit sounding pitifully weak, no lung power.

He had runny, green poop that we had to wash off and found flies starting to lay eggs in it, what with him laying around so much of the time, but fixed that pronto. We brought him in the house, then noticed his abdomen felt wrong, too tight. And since he was in a dog kennel, we also saw he wasn't pooping solids at all for a few days. Tried to remedy that, and he did manage to get out some semi-solid poop, but not nearly enough for what he'd eaten over the past week.

Now, I think he may be in renal failure, but contrary to what some folks on BYC think, I'm not a vet and don't know everything. It's just a guess, judging from what happened with a dog I had and his symptoms when his own kidneys failed the day he died.

All this has happened in stages over the space of about six weeks. Before that, there was not a sign that he was anything but a big healthy rooster, old yes, but very healthy and robust. One of his hens is dying right now of Egg Yolk Peritonitis and they will be buried in the same grave. It's touch and go as to which one will go first, unless we just take matters into our own hands with one or both. Her, it isn't as difficult. Suede is another matter.
 
I did a quick search and found several articles on storing poultry semen. So there is hope and I wish you success. Here is a link to one, don't know if this is any help:

http://ps.fass.org/content/66/12/2032.abstract

Does Suede have any progeny out there, already? If this doesn't work, maybe you could use his offspring, so you have a part of him?

I know how sad it is to lose a beloved animal. I'm so sorry.

Kim
 
I did a quick search and found several articles on storing poultry semen. So there is hope and I wish you success. Here is a link to one, don't know if this is any help:

http://ps.fass.org/content/66/12/2032.abstract

Does Suede have any progeny out there, already? If this doesn't work, maybe you could use his offspring, so you have a part of him?

I know how sad it is to lose a beloved animal. I'm so sorry.

Kim

Thanks for the article, Kim. He has hundreds of sons and daughters all over the country, plus grandkids and great-grandkids. I just don't happen to have any of them myself. The only daughter of his that I had just died at the age of almost 5 years old herself but wasn't at my place. She was owned by Cetawin. Suede has already outlived three of my Barred Rock roosters and four of his own hens, five of them if Hope dies before he does.

I honestly did not plan to keep any more BBS Orps, but if I could get one son or daughter, even for my friend who loves him as much as I do, that would be wonderful.
 
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SpeckedHen..I am so sorry
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I have never done anything like this before but, I have AI'd many dogs. Never postmortem.

My x-husband went through chemo for Hodgkin's. After two years had passed, we wanted to know if he had any chance of fathering a child. The sample had to remain at body temp for the time from home to the lab. That being said. Before Suede passes, figure out how you will keep him at body temp for the time it will take to harvest the semen. Then, figure out how to keep it at the correct body temp until it is used. Practice. Have a place that you can get to the girls that you want to breed, quickly. I kept my husband's sample in my bra. Work quickly. The closer to body temp you can keep it, the better the chances of success.

Just my thoughts. I wish I knew more.
 
Thanks for the suggestion, Gina. We're going to go off and take a break. Hopefully, he won't pass while we're gone, but we really need to get out for a bit. This is exhausting and stressful, to say the least. Will check the thread when we get home.

If it doesn't happen, well, then it doesn't, but at least we are going to give it a try.
 
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