Watery poop

Vicki B

Songster
7 Years
Jun 5, 2016
66
35
126
I have three chicks that are five weeks old. One of them has had watery poop for almost a week I’m putting some probiotics in the water and I did put a little bit of apple cider vinegar for 2 days. didn’t help. She seems normal eating good drinking good running around the other two chicks have normal poop I’m posting a picture does this look normal? I don’t see any worms. There is a piece of shaving in the pic in the poop. They are on medicated start and grow.
 

Attachments

  • 635F3EE7-BF72-4498-A19B-5C242BE4C397.jpeg
    635F3EE7-BF72-4498-A19B-5C242BE4C397.jpeg
    570.7 KB · Views: 84
Are they getting anything to eat such as squash and melon with high water content? Do the chicks seem to be panting and consuming a lot of water?
 
No all they get is start and grow. Only one has the problem. The other two are fine. They are not panting pr drinking excess.
 
If the chick seems healthy and normal, this may be its default poop setting. I had a chicken like that. When she was first brought home, it alarmed me how watery her poop was. I could hear it whenever she pooped - "splort!"

As she grew, her poop remained watery, but she seemed healthy enough. Fast forward eight years. Not a sick day in her life, and she continued to have watery poop until the day she died.
 
If the chick seems healthy and normal, this may be its default poop setting. I had a chicken like that. When she was first brought home, it alarmed me how watery her poop was. I could hear it whenever she pooped - "splort!"

As she grew, her poop remained watery, but she seemed healthy enough. Fast forward eight years. Not a sick day in her life, and she continued to have watery poop until the day she died.
I was searching around for info on watery poop, and this thread made me feel so much better. I have a speckled sussex that eats fine (but seems to prefer scratching around), drinks a LOT, but she's super active. She has more watery poop than the other chicks, but otherwise, she seems fine. I'm a first time chicken mom so of course I'm worried.

But if this is true, maybe it's nothing. Good thing to note -- my Sussex chick is always the first to dart to my hand for food (I feed crumbled egg yolk as a treat) and she utterly demolishes it every time.
 
My chick with the watery poop was a Speckled Sussex. I wonder if the breed has a recessive gene for splorty poop.
Now I'm EXTRA reassured, lol! Amazing! Thanks for sharing your experience. She's a wonderful little chick, I bet she'll be very happy when we move her outside in a few more weeks. She's probably our most vigorous scratcher in the brooder.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom