• giveaway ENDS SOON! Cutest Baby Fowl Photo Contest: Win a Brinsea Maxi 24 EX Connect CLICK HERE!

Why are my chickens tail feathers bare on the shaft?

sycamore gal

Hatching
Oct 13, 2017
3
0
4
I have 10 red sexlink hens that are 18 months old. They have been super layers, but over the past couple months I have noticed the shaft of their tail feathers are bare and their shells are much softer than normal. I feed layer feed with oyster shells and grit mixed with the feed. They free range for 5-6 hours per day.
IMG_5126.PNG
 
Looks like someone is biting or pulling on her tail with their beak. I have a pair of guineafowl males and the one always is biting down and pulling on the others tail, it gets bare at the ends like that.
 
If you can wait till tonight I will look up in my chicken health book if it has anything about feathers like this. Maybe it is worms???
Sorry I looked closer at the picture and realized it is all the feathers, not just the tail.
 
All 10 of them have this problem. I also have some 8 month old Easter eggers that share the same coop, and they look great. We do not have roosters.
 
Hey I looked up the feather sections of my book. It says a couple things that be helpful.
 

Attachments

  • IMAG0855.jpg
    IMAG0855.jpg
    372.2 KB · Views: 161
  • IMAG0853.jpg
    IMAG0853.jpg
    433.6 KB · Views: 157
  • IMAG0851.jpg
    IMAG0851.jpg
    369.6 KB · Views: 140
  • IMAG0850.jpg
    IMAG0850.jpg
    362.9 KB · Views: 136
Thanks for the info! Would you mind sharing the name of your book? I'm thinking it might be a good investment!
 
I have 10 red sexlink hens that are 18 months old. They have been super layers, but over the past couple months I have noticed the shaft of their tail feathers are bare and their shells are much softer than normal. I feed layer feed with oyster shells and grit mixed with the feed.

Hi @sycamore gal :frow Welcome To BYC

At 18months they are more than likely beginning to molt. Good layers can have ragged looking feathers from getting into/out of nesting boxes, etc.
Egg laying can also lessen or stop during this time, egg quality (thin/soft shells) could also be due to molting as well.

Just to be sure there is nothing else going on - check them over for lice/mites and treat with a Permethrin based poultry spray or dust if you find any.

Evaluate what and how you are feeding - layer feed is fine, but you may want to offer the oyster shell and poultry grit free choice instead of mixing them with the feed - this way the birds don't have to pick through the feed. They will take the shell or grit as needed. Aim for treats to be no more than 5-10% of daily intake. If they are molting, then extra protein or vitamins may help give them a boost.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom