I saw some good tutorials on utube over treating bumblefoot.. I came across them sometime last year or something
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grats!!!
I was wondering about the hens holding the sperm in for later use.. I thought it was a month long personally... so technically the roo might be shooting blanks NOW but the hens might be fertile still because he didnt shoot blanks two weeks ago? ugh all I want is a couple fertile eggs to hatch for new years.. my other half keeps telling me to blow in the chickens beak to get an egg faster lol
I am going to make a BIG assumption here...... It's not the fertility of the rooster or the temperature of his comb..... It has to do with the cost of heat to keep the chicks alive and then there's the temperature during transportation... The chicks would die in transport.... Now that's not cost effective.... Good try at a distracting argument.... Maybe you should rethink your argument... (I said that politely, by the way)... I'm not here to cause a ruckus... just trying to learn....
Facts Ma'am, just the facts....
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I've done the surgery. The biggest problem, for me, is keeping the open wound clean and wrapped until it's healed.
When I did the surgery I never found the hard core that is always mentioned, and it involved several places on the bottom of both feet. It was a hen I "inherited" so it had gone further than it should have.
oops, it posted before I was done, so ETA:
@Hinotori has done this more than once with good success. If you look for tutorials with good photos it helps a lot. It's not as hard as it might seem. Keeping the bird still by wrapping in a towel seems to be the biggest thing. The bird doesn't seem to feel the incision.
By the way, are you aware that some neosporin has an ingredient to numb the pain and it's BAD for chickens? It's a "...caine" if memory serves.
Yes. Make sure you get it WITHOUT pain relief and you're fine. I just did a bumblefoot surgery recently. It was a big one and didn't really want to come out until I got enough cut around and started massaging and squeezing on the sides. Then the thing came out. It was HUGE. I wish this girl wouldn't get them, but she's really prone to them.
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If the blowing doesn't work, you have to carefully squeeze the hen like she's a bagpipe.![]()
My rooster has been injured for at least 3 weeks (attacked by a coyote). I check my hens' eggs yesterday and they were all fertile. Granted, I have another rooster, but I am certain he is not servicing all the hens since there are just too many.
I also believe the hatchery birds are housed in more of a controlled environment than most our outdoor flocks. They have constant light sources and a more stable temperature year round. I am seriously trying to get my birds to stop laying. I keep the lights on in the barn until 6 p.m. so I can feed, then they are off. The chickens are getting 11 hours max and they are still laying! Some of the older hens have slowed down, but the pullets lay almost every day as do my red stars. Crazy girls.