- Jan 30, 2009
- 428
- 6
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Quote:
Did you see her first thing this morning? My guess would be that she fell off the roost last night and either sprained or broke her neck. I think you are worrying too much about respiratory diseases or botulism. My vote is freak accident.
i saw her late last night and my wife called me at work around 11am to tell me about it. my first assumption was that she got spooked while under the roosts and may have flown into a 2x4.
she came out of the coop on the morning with a hung head. when i got home she wouldn't even move and appeared to be suffering. her head was going from in the pine chips to about two inches off the deck, slow and shaky.
I always try to give nature all the help I can. I bring them in the house, in a dog crate w/shavings for warmth (any injured animal has a hard time generating their own heat), I feed them hot mash, etc. to entice eating, usually top coated with some flax seed, electrolytes in the water, etc. And then I just hope for the best.
I had a buff orp roo that was on his side and no clue what happened, acted paralyzed. Did as above and then started little leg exercies (ah 1, 2, 3, 4, reverse legs, repeat lol). Before long he could manage to balance on his chest, using his wings. The day by day grew stronger, I'd sit with him outside on sunny days. That was the year I sold my chickens and he really bonded to me by the time he healed. During the night while watching TV and could call "Mrrrr Chickennn" and he'd talk back. Very cool roo, I miss him.
Did you see her first thing this morning? My guess would be that she fell off the roost last night and either sprained or broke her neck. I think you are worrying too much about respiratory diseases or botulism. My vote is freak accident.
i saw her late last night and my wife called me at work around 11am to tell me about it. my first assumption was that she got spooked while under the roosts and may have flown into a 2x4.
she came out of the coop on the morning with a hung head. when i got home she wouldn't even move and appeared to be suffering. her head was going from in the pine chips to about two inches off the deck, slow and shaky.
I always try to give nature all the help I can. I bring them in the house, in a dog crate w/shavings for warmth (any injured animal has a hard time generating their own heat), I feed them hot mash, etc. to entice eating, usually top coated with some flax seed, electrolytes in the water, etc. And then I just hope for the best.
I had a buff orp roo that was on his side and no clue what happened, acted paralyzed. Did as above and then started little leg exercies (ah 1, 2, 3, 4, reverse legs, repeat lol). Before long he could manage to balance on his chest, using his wings. The day by day grew stronger, I'd sit with him outside on sunny days. That was the year I sold my chickens and he really bonded to me by the time he healed. During the night while watching TV and could call "Mrrrr Chickennn" and he'd talk back. Very cool roo, I miss him.