EmmaRainboe
🙄🤚💙Duckie💜😩🤚
You might want to seperate her just for tonight then after she goes to bed, take away her food, then in the morning make sure her crop has emptied.
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Thank you for that, I'll get back to you to tell you how she is and I'll try my best to remove water from her cage,I don't know about an "easy fix", but chances are we can help her.
When a chicken vomits, it's most likely from a blockage somewhere in the digestive system that keeps the crop from emptying. This may be different from a crop disorder where either a yeast infection or impacted material block the crop at it's drainage point.
She could be blocked anywhere between the crop and gizzard or even farther down towards the cloaca where the poop emerges.
So, first you need to tel us if she's been pooping and if so, what it looks like. Since you can't take pictures, you need to draw a picture with words. Tell us what familiar thing the poop resembles, using as many words as you need to.
Grit is stone gravel, small as coarse sand but with very sharp edges. Grit is NOT oyster shell, even if some manufacturers of feed call it that. Grit is the first thing you need to find for her. Sift it from the dirt in your yard if you can't go to the feed store and buy a bag of granite grit.
The next thing you need to do is to narrow down where the obstruction is. You do this by checking her crop in the morning before you let her have food and water. If the crop is full, we've confirmed a blockage. Next, you need to feel the crop and decide what it feels like. Is it hard and lumpy like a bunch of grass and leaves balled up or soft and squishy like Jello?
You will give us that report in the morning. We will check back with you and see where we go from here.
Meanwhile, give her water now, but take it away when she goes to sleep. Don't give any more food right now.
I'll also check with my Uncle since he also know bit about chickens and see what he thinks.I don't know about an "easy fix", but chances are we can help her.
When a chicken vomits, it's most likely from a blockage somewhere in the digestive system that keeps the crop from emptying. This may be different from a crop disorder where either a yeast infection or impacted material block the crop at it's drainage point.
She could be blocked anywhere between the crop and gizzard or even farther down towards the cloaca where the poop emerges.
So, first you need to tel us if she's been pooping and if so, what it looks like. Since you can't take pictures, you need to draw a picture with words. Tell us what familiar thing the poop resembles, using as many words as you need to.
Grit is stone gravel, small as coarse sand but with very sharp edges. Grit is NOT oyster shell, even if some manufacturers of feed call it that. Grit is the first thing you need to find for her. Sift it from the dirt in your yard if you can't go to the feed store and buy a bag of granite grit.
The next thing you need to do is to narrow down where the obstruction is. You do this by checking her crop in the morning before you let her have food and water. If the crop is full, we've confirmed a blockage. Next, you need to feel the crop and decide what it feels like. Is it hard and lumpy like a bunch of grass and leaves balled up or soft and squishy like Jello?
You will give us that report in the morning. We will check back with you and see where we go from here.
Meanwhile, give her water now, but take it away when she goes to sleep. Don't give any more food right now.
So my chicken is better now we think its just the hot weather.I don't know about an "easy fix", but chances are we can help her.
When a chicken vomits, it's most likely from a blockage somewhere in the digestive system that keeps the crop from emptying. This may be different from a crop disorder where either a yeast infection or impacted material block the crop at it's drainage point.
She could be blocked anywhere between the crop and gizzard or even farther down towards the cloaca where the poop emerges.
So, first you need to tel us if she's been pooping and if so, what it looks like. Since you can't take pictures, you need to draw a picture with words. Tell us what familiar thing the poop resembles, using as many words as you need to.
Grit is stone gravel, small as coarse sand but with very sharp edges. Grit is NOT oyster shell, even if some manufacturers of feed call it that. Grit is the first thing you need to find for her. Sift it from the dirt in your yard if you can't go to the feed store and buy a bag of granite grit.
The next thing you need to do is to narrow down where the obstruction is. You do this by checking her crop in the morning before you let her have food and water. If the crop is full, we've confirmed a blockage. Next, you need to feel the crop and decide what it feels like. Is it hard and lumpy like a bunch of grass and leaves balled up or soft and squishy like Jello?
You will give us that report in the morning. We will check back with you and see where we go from here.
Meanwhile, give her water now, but take it away when she goes to sleep. Don't give any more food right now.
Glad she's better.So my chicken is better now we think its just the hot weather.
ThanksGlad she's better.