Thursday morning the midget whites I special ordered arrived at the feed store. I had ordered five but four came in.
They came home and all were eating and drinking and cheeping and running around. At first they spent a lot of time under the lamp, but by the second day they were running around like crazy, not spending a huge amount of time directly under the lamp except when they took naps. The thermometer says it is in the mid to high 90s directly underneath.
Friday we woke to find one poult standing under the light, eyes closed, wings drooping, swaying back and forth. When his broodermates took naps on the ground, he stayed upright, but was wobbly. He faced the side of the brooder, but I thought this was because the others were very active and bothered him. His poops were a little watery, mostly white with just a little of the normal green in them.
He stopped eating and drinking and I spent 24 hours feeding him with an eye dropper. He wasn't very interested and resisted eating, but managed to hold on another day. Yesterday he died.
I thought maybe he just never fully recovered from the stress of shipping.
The other three ran like crazy all afternoon. They seemed healthier than the dickens having fun racing around the brooder, smashing into each other and the waterer. They seemed the picture of youthful exuberance. One was already trying to jump out! (The chicks we raised last year didn't try that for weeks.) We went out to have dinner with friends and came back last night to find another poult standing, facing the wall, and swaying. This morning it was dead.
I raised chicks last year with zero fatalities, now I've lost half of my poults in four days. What am I doing wrong? Are they sick? Getting concussed from running around wildly? What can I do to help them?
Oh I don't know if this is a symptom, but there was always one very noisy poult. Very noisy. I don't know if it was a poult who later succumbed, because they all look alike, but I thought it might be worth mentioning. Now one of my survivors is cheeping loudly, and I'm hoping it is not the first sign of another one going down...
Does anything look amiss?
They came home and all were eating and drinking and cheeping and running around. At first they spent a lot of time under the lamp, but by the second day they were running around like crazy, not spending a huge amount of time directly under the lamp except when they took naps. The thermometer says it is in the mid to high 90s directly underneath.
Friday we woke to find one poult standing under the light, eyes closed, wings drooping, swaying back and forth. When his broodermates took naps on the ground, he stayed upright, but was wobbly. He faced the side of the brooder, but I thought this was because the others were very active and bothered him. His poops were a little watery, mostly white with just a little of the normal green in them.
He stopped eating and drinking and I spent 24 hours feeding him with an eye dropper. He wasn't very interested and resisted eating, but managed to hold on another day. Yesterday he died.
I thought maybe he just never fully recovered from the stress of shipping.
The other three ran like crazy all afternoon. They seemed healthier than the dickens having fun racing around the brooder, smashing into each other and the waterer. They seemed the picture of youthful exuberance. One was already trying to jump out! (The chicks we raised last year didn't try that for weeks.) We went out to have dinner with friends and came back last night to find another poult standing, facing the wall, and swaying. This morning it was dead.
I raised chicks last year with zero fatalities, now I've lost half of my poults in four days. What am I doing wrong? Are they sick? Getting concussed from running around wildly? What can I do to help them?
Oh I don't know if this is a symptom, but there was always one very noisy poult. Very noisy. I don't know if it was a poult who later succumbed, because they all look alike, but I thought it might be worth mentioning. Now one of my survivors is cheeping loudly, and I'm hoping it is not the first sign of another one going down...
Does anything look amiss?
