Sunday, January 30, 2011

Benefits of Water in Winter

 Things are still frosty cold here in Michigan.  Up our lane at the top of the hill we have 1 1/2 feet of snow!  It is sure deep!  The Working Girls still venture out of their coop daily, but when the temps have been sub-zero they stayed huddled beneath their Chookie Palace, sharing a bit of warmth from wing to wing.  Evening temps have been as low as 15 below zero.  BUR-R-R!
Miss Lissy, at left
During the recent drop in temperatures, Miss Lizzy began her MOLT, of all things!  Yep, believe it or not!  She has a voracious appetite, so she's regaining what has been depleted in her system from creating those yummy fresh eggs all this time.  I'm willing to be that perhaps in March she'll start laying again for us.  But at this point in time, she's the little firecracker that keeps the rest of the girls in line!
Hope you are remembering to provide fresh water daily to your livestock - the chickens, in particular.  Water from a warmed device is best - warmth encourages them to drink.  If they are on pelleted feed and aren't drinking, the feed can get stuck in their crops and cause blockages.  The blockage will look like a hard lump off to the side of the birds neck, and it will be semi hard or rock hard.  The bird will have stopped eating or drinking anything at all, which is not a good sign!  The bird will have nothing to excrete, either.  It is blocked from both ends.  The bird may take on a sickly posture - head tucked down, tail tucked down, and may be trying to eliminate, with no success.  When blockages happen, there are several ways to open things up again, if you are not squeamish.  (If you ARE, then call your veterinarian - - -  IMMEDIATELY!)
Blockages can be opened by inserting a thin tube into the opened mouth of your chicken and, moving it past the opening to the airway; pipe in small amounts of tepid water and mineral oil.  Not too much all at once - you want it to go into the throat, not the windpipe.  If you pipe it too quickly, it can be inhaled, and your bird will "drown" in the fluids that were meant to save her.  Another way to assist in blockage removal is to hold the chicken upside down, head near the ground, and massage the blockage in its crop until it "vomits".  Do this in increments of 30 seconds only, then let the bird rest upright, and then turn it again and massage for 30 seconds, then let it rest.  You should have success in a short amount of time if the blockage isn't too horrid.  Keep the bird isolated in a separate area where you can keep an eye on her to be sure she's eating, drinking, and "emptying out" on a regular schedule.  When all looks well, return her to her flock-mates. 

Happy Winter -
the ChickenWrangler

5 comments:

Angela said...

That's a lot of snow Chicken Wrangler! And the -15 degree weather too! Wow! I thought it was cold here but you have us beat! I'm so glad that your girls have you to take the great care of them that you do! I'm sure it keeps you busy keeping their water from freezing!

Stay warm!
Angela

Larkrise garden girl said...

Wow, Look at all that snow! I am planning on getting some girls in the spring. I have raised Chickens before and I was happy to see all the information you have on your site, Cheri

^..^Corgidogmama said...

This is really serious information you share for those with chickens.
Your girls are sure lovely, and seem not to mind the snow too much.
Lovely out your way Monica, such a pretty place to call home!

Chatty Crone said...

Okay that is a heck of a lot of snow.
Yours girls are so pretty and healthy looking.
15 degrees is cold!

Love, sandie

Rose said...

i'm back at blogging i can't imagine having all of that snow. tough for the hens to be dealing with this. take care rose