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Not judging at all. He said they're pets but then added "not like our dog of course". It doesn't sound like money was the issue. Please don't YOU judge. It's all a matter of priorities and seldom do chickens rate very high on the list. Oftentimes the same people who claim they can't "afford" a vet visit are the people with new cars, new furniture, vacations, etc. Claiming you can't "afford" a vet isn't always the honest truth. When I worked at a vet clinic we put down many many dogs that owners claimed they couldn't "afford" to treat. Then they'd drive off in their Mercedes. If one were to be honest it wasn't that they couldn't afford it, it's that the animal didn't mean enough to them. Just trying to be honest instead of hypocritical.
And Jeffross-if you ask if they'll see poulty you'll get a no. If you ask if they'll see birds, they do. People don't consider chickens 'worthy' of vet care, vets included sometimes.
Well, I didn't ask about poultry or birds. I specifically asked if they treated chickens, and was told no. As for the money issue, not that it's anyone's business, but that is partially the issue. That's why I called locally, and am not willing to travel 3 hours to Raleigh or something. I'm sorry if not putting my chickens on the same level as my dog is offensive to someone, but that's the case. Everyone gets to draw that line somewhere, and I, personally, would not presume to tell someone else where to draw that line. As a chicken owner, you should understand that there are a great many animal activists that don't believe you should cage animals at all.
So yes, I could take some of the money I had set aside to buy my children Christmas presents, hop in my 1988 Jeep Laredo with a broken leaf spring, and drive 6 hours round trip to a vet to diagnose a chicken that might likely die anyway. Or, I could put it out of it's misery (the hen died yesterday on it's own, and the roo I culled today), maybe even shed a tear at their passing, and remember them for the healthy birds they were. And then sit outside with my remaining flock, have an adult beverage, and remember that everyone is different, and try not to be judgmental about the way other people live their lives or treat their family, pets, and tomato plants.