Just popped outside and found Daisy Marsh-Daisy laying on her side, feet behind her, like she was sunbathing or dust-bathing, but panting for breath and unable to stand.
DD and I have tried getting her to regurgitate her crop as it felt like it might be cropbound, but she wouldn't bring anything up. We tried a little warm olive oil applied through a BOP crop tube to oil the works, but nothing happened despite turning her upside down and massaging the crop from bottom to top.
There are no other symptoms other than the stretched out legs and one foot curled round in a ball and this panting for breath. She does have a cut comb but we think this might from when she collapsed. We know she hadn't been collapsed long because the BH had seen her half an hour before.
We've phoned the vet but were just told to keep an eye on her as he hadn't any experience with poultry (it's one of the schemes where all vets in the district do a rota for out of hours and I don't know this guy) and to make an appt with our vet tomorrow.
Meanwhile, Daisy is propped in a box, as comfortable as we can make her. The box is in the nestbox of the henhouse as she seemed calmer with the other girls around her.
Any ideas?
Jules
DD and I have tried getting her to regurgitate her crop as it felt like it might be cropbound, but she wouldn't bring anything up. We tried a little warm olive oil applied through a BOP crop tube to oil the works, but nothing happened despite turning her upside down and massaging the crop from bottom to top.
There are no other symptoms other than the stretched out legs and one foot curled round in a ball and this panting for breath. She does have a cut comb but we think this might from when she collapsed. We know she hadn't been collapsed long because the BH had seen her half an hour before.
We've phoned the vet but were just told to keep an eye on her as he hadn't any experience with poultry (it's one of the schemes where all vets in the district do a rota for out of hours and I don't know this guy) and to make an appt with our vet tomorrow.
Meanwhile, Daisy is propped in a box, as comfortable as we can make her. The box is in the nestbox of the henhouse as she seemed calmer with the other girls around her.
Any ideas?
Jules
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