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  • help please, blood on eggs

    Hello

    I wonder if anyone can help? I have three ex-batts who arrived at the beginning of June. They have all flourished, have put on weight and started getting their feathers back and have been healthy and happy so far, apart from the occasional soft egg. They have been laying fairly regularly; sometimes I don't get an egg every day from all of them but mostly over the last three or four weeks there have been three eggs in the nest box every day. I keep them in a 6ftx6ft pen and try to let them out for at least 45 mins to an hour every evening so they can have a scratch around in the soil. The floor of the pen is covered in easibed wood shavings and I poo pick every day; I also clean the poo out of their house every morning. So they are kept very clean. They have fresh food and water every day, layers mash with about a third of a teaspoon of poultry spice in it, corn in the evenings and a cabbage thrown into the pen for them to attack about three times a week.

    Yesterday when I went to collect the eggs I found a blood streaked soft-shelled egg which I threw in the compost bin. Today I let the girls out at 7.15am and found another egg with blood streaks on it, this time with a proper hard shell. There was the usual amount of poo in the house and just a little of it had blood in it, but the egg had landed in this poo so I wasn't sure if the poo had blood IN it or ON it, if you see what I mean. However one of the girls had done a bit of poop in the pen and there seemed to be a bit of blood in that. I have examined the vents and they are all clean. All the girls are stuffing their faces and scratching around and don't seem poorly in themselves.

    Does anyone have any idea what this could be? The egg I found this morning had quite a lot of blood streaks on it. I think it is Mavis, and as far as I know she has not laid a soft-shelled egg before yesterday (it's usually Deidre who has funny laying habits but she went in the nest box after Mavis yesterday and laid a normal egg. Rita's eggs are always huge and speckly so I know it wasn't hers). Could this be a bit like piles in humans, ie Mavis strained to lay a soft-shelled egg yesterday and still has a burst vein or something inside her vent? Or is it something more sinister?

    Should I wait until tomorrow and see how she is and if she lays another blood-streaked egg then take her to the vet? I have a good avian vet (he is an avian specialist). I have to go out to work now but I will check on the poo situation when I get back - although I think the easibed may have soaked up any evidence as it's very efficient at drying out poops!

    Could it be coccidiosis? Wouldn't this have been obvious before now though, as I've had them for nearly four months?

    I hope one of you experienced chooky keepers can advise me. I want to do the best for my girls but I only have four months' experience of healthy chickens, not poorly ones!

    Thanks for reading this.

  • #2
    If you have a good avian vet then maybe it's a good idea to take her along. Blood IN poo can indicate coccidiosis, but there would be other symptoms such as hunched up unhappy bird, diarrhoea and not eating. If they are otherwise well then I would think this is not the case, but your vet could take a poo sample for screening.

    As the blood is coming out on the eggs too I think a more likely explanation is some damage to the vent, possibly caused by being pecked. Your vet should be able to examine her fully to check this out too.

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    • #3
      Wouldn't explain the eggs,but have you wormed your girls recently?
      We were finding the very occassional poo with just a little blood in it & were told as they had no other symptoms it could be worms...since worming them with Flubenvet(we used to use Vermex)all their poos are perfectly normal.
      I think a trip to the vets may be a good idea though.
      the fates lead him who will;him who won't they drag.

      Happiness is not having what you want,but wanting what you have.xx

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      • #4
        Just a thought, are there any berries they could be eating in the garden. I had a panic the other week with little piles of red poop all over the place. every chicken I have was doing it. After the initial panic I remembered they had all had a massive helping of the damson and apple mush I had left after making jelly the day before.
        You sound a little more organised then me though, I just thought I would mention it in case.
        good luck

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        • #5
          Thank you all for your replies.

          They were wormed about two adn a half months ago using flubenvet so I don't think they can have worms (or at least not a heavy load). And there are no red berries in the garden. There was no blood in any poo that I could see when I got back from work today, and all the hens were happy to guzzle corn from my hand (I had half expected to find a poorly hen so this was a great relief!).

          I shall see what happens tomorrow morning. They are all laying early at the moment so hopefully I should be able to check eggs and vents and still have time to take the right hen to the vet in the morning if needs be. They do get terribly offended when I pick them up to check their vents though - mind you I don't suppose I'd be best pleased if someone picked me up and had a poke at my bum!

          Fingers crossed that they are all OK in the morning.

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