Chickens

First Aid Awareness

Have all your necessitie­s ready for when health issues arise.

- By Bruce & Elaine Ingram

Have all your necessitie­s ready for when health issues arise.

When my wife, Elaine, and I began our chicken-raising career, we — like many first-timers — committed numerous errors. Indeed, the first three or four years, every single bird that came down with some malady died. We even came up with the maxim that “a sick chicken is a dead chicken.” One particular memory is especially painful to recall.

Boss was the first heritage Rhode Island Red rooster to ever lead our flock. Big, brave and also benevolent toward his hens and us, he possessed all the traits one desires in a roo. Then one morning, he seemed lethargic and didn’t crow; the second morning saw him increasing­ly sluggish, and a smaller rooster began pecking him.

Boss died the next morning, and while examining his vent area, I witnessed hundreds of maggots feeding on him. The poor creature had died of fly strike, and through our ignorance and hesitation, we had done nothing to save him.

Contrast that situation with what happened several years ago. One morning a pullet left the henhouse and instead of joining everyone else at the feeder and waterer, she plopped down in the dirt. I immediatel­y went to her, searched through her wing and breast feathers for beasties and then tipped her over to examine the vent. There, I found about a dozen maggots; she was in the first stages of fly strike.

I immediatel­y left the run with the young hen, called out to Elaine to ask her to set up our chicken hospital, and then shook Prozap Garden

& Poultry Dust all over the pullet’s body with special attention to the vent and wing areas. Meanwhile, Elaine had reopened our chicken sickbay, which consists of two tarps laid on top of each other, a childproof fence formed into a rectangle on top of the tarps and an old screen door as the ceiling.

After applying the poultry dust, I watched as dozens of maggots came streaming off the pullet, dying not long after they crashed to the ground. Next, we “admitted” the pullet to our hospital where Elaine had ready some brown bread soaked with probiotics, which had also been added to her waterer.

My wife had also put blueberrie­s, a true super food for chickens and humans, in the feeder. Of course, with the pullet ensconced in our infirmary, she was safe from the bullying that chickens direct toward their flock members when they become ill.

The next day, our pullet became perkier, improved steadily over the next three days, and on day four of her stay, we deemed her well enough to rejoin her flock. She even laid an egg a few days later and has been hale and hardy ever since. No longer do we believe in the proverb that a sick chicken is a dead one. And with that, I’ll let my wife take it from here …

ELAINE’S FIRST AID KIT

My husband, Bruce, is in charge of making the initial diagnosis of whether our chickens are ill or not, as he seems better at noticing if anything is wrong with them. Bruce is also in charge of letting our birds out of the coop in the morning and providing their food and water for the day. And he likes to watch all of our individual birds start their day and make sure they are acting normally. But it’s my job to primarily take care of the sick. Here are some of the items necessary for a well-conceived first-aid kit.

PETROLEUM JELLY. Across many generation­s this balm has been applied to humans for chapped lips, abrasions, moisturizi­ng and all kinds of minor ailments. Basically, petroleum jelly serves the same purpose for chickens, minus the chapped lips, of course. We especially use this ointment for combs and wattles showing frostbite, as well as a protection against frost burn.

With their bigger combs and wattles, roosters are especially likely to experience frostbite in the wintertime. And whether a rooster or a hen is being treated for this ailment, you’ll need someone to hold a bird while the other person applies petroleum jelly. Our chickens simply don’t like this salve rubbed on them so Bruce will hold the squirming individual while I gently rub it on the afflicted part. Despite their protests, we like to think that they sense that their combs and wattles feel better afterward.

Sometimes, especially during the winter, we’ll find small mites on these same areas as well as on the legs. Petroleum jelly can be very helpful for smothering mites.

VETRX POULTRY AID: This is an oily solution that is very beneficial in helping sooth a chicken that is displaying early signs of a cold such as sneezing. Of course, healthy chickens sneeze a great deal with all the dust in their environmen­t. But if a bird continues to sneeze throughout the day, it may indicate a malady of some kind.

Vetrx is very helpful for any kind of respirator­y problem. I add a few drops, which has a menthol smell, to the edges of the waterer. If a chicken seems overly weak, I will dip bread in the waterer after Vetrx has been added and give the treat to her.

HEN HEALER MULTIPURPO­SE OINTMENT: This blue salve is what we utilize when a hen has wounds and scratches or abrasions from overly lustful roosters. We also used Hen Healer one time when Don, our alpha Rhode Island Red rooster, lost a spur during a fight with one of his offspring, who shepherds a flock in the adjoining pen.

Usually come morning, the two roos crash into the fencing a few times as part of a fruitless attempt to annihilate the other, and then they’re done jousting for the day. But this time, the daily morning skirmish took place a little longer and one of Don’s 2-inch-long spurs became the casualty. The salve was just the thing to keep an infection from occurring as it creates a barrier to insects and dirt.

VETERICYN PLUS ANTIMICROB­IAL POULTRY CARE: This very beneficial balm helps heal abrasions, cuts, pecking wounds and bare areas due to feather loss. Christine Haxton, a chicken fancier who lives near us, feels the product even encourages regrowth of feathers that are lost due to injury. Typically, I first spray Vetericyn on the afflicted area to clean and disinfect the wound, then next apply any salves or ointments.

SAV A CHICK PROBIOTIC POWDER & ELECTROLYT­E POWDER: We keep these products on hand in single use packs, adding them to the drinking water of any ailing or stressed bird. Usually, we add the probiotic when a chicken has experience­d a serious affliction such as fly strike or a minor one such as a cold and/or sneezing.

Also, when any chicken becomes ill with anything and has to be temporaril­y removed from the flock, every other chicken receives the probiotic, as does the one in the hospital. We primarily use the electrolyt­e powder as a pick-me-up on extremely hot days.

WAZINE TURKEY, CHICKEN & SWINE WORMER: After our chickens stop laying, usually by November, we add Wazine to their waterer as a preventive measure for the winter to come.

PROZAP GARDEN & POULTRY DUST: The dust we use contains Permethrin, which is a synthetic insecticid­e that repels ticks, flies and many other pests. In fact, as noted earlier, it will kill maggots on contact.

During periods where we see lots of flies, or if there is fly larva in the henhouse droppings, we dust the flock as a preventive measure. When a bird has been stricken with fly strike, we dust that individual before moving it indoors to the chicken hospital.

We no longer believe that a sick chicken is a dead one, and neither should you. Obviously, all of us will lose a bird from time to time, but having the items on hand to create a chicken hospital and always keeping a well-stocked first-aid kit will potentiall­y keep deaths to a minimum and result in a healthier flock overall.

Bruce Ingram has been a freelance writer and photograph­er for more than 30 years. He has written more than 2,000 magazine articles and also five books on smallmouth river fishing. He and his wife, Elaine, write a weekly blog about the outdoors as well as their chickens: http://bruceingra­moutdoorsb­log.blogspot.com.

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 ??  ?? Elaine (far right) gives a sick rooster his medicine (enclosed in some bread) as the bird recovers in their chicken hospital.
Elaine (far right) gives a sick rooster his medicine (enclosed in some bread) as the bird recovers in their chicken hospital.
 ??  ?? Elaine (right) holds a chicken while Bruce sprays a hen with an ointment. Treating a chicken is often a two-person job.
Elaine (right) holds a chicken while Bruce sprays a hen with an ointment. Treating a chicken is often a two-person job.
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