How to feed a baby chick that won t eat
How to Help a Sick Chicken
Finding a trained poultry veterinarian or any vet who will agree to treat chickens is extremely difficult, if not impossible for many and nothing leaves a chicken keeper feeling more helpless than not knowing how to help a sick flock member. This article covers basic guidelines to follow when caring for a sick chicken without a vet.
Chickens offer subtle cues when they are under the weather and by regularly spending time with our flocks, we will be able to pick up on signs that they are sick. Common indications of a sick chicken include: hiding, inactivity, pale comb or wattles, unusual droppings, unusual posture, lethargy, lack of appetite and reduced egg production- all indications that closer observation is needed.
DOs & DON’Ts OF SICK CHICKEN CAREDO ISOLATE
Priority #1 is to provide a sick chicken with a quiet, protected, warm environment away from the flock where it can be observed closely. Separation from the flock keeps it protected from being bullied or pecked by other flock members and protects the rest of the flock from what may be a contagious condition. I show a variety of sick bay setups in this article.
DO HYDRATE
Priority #2 is to keep the sick chicken hydrated throughout the crisis even if that means offering water by spoon or dropper frequently. Water is involved in every aspect of a chicken’s metabolism from regulating body temperature to digesting food, and eliminating body wastes and if the bird is not hydrated, it does not stand a chance of fighting illness.
Adding a vitamin/electrolyte supplement into the drinking water for a day or two can help an already dehydrated chicken re-hydrate. In the absence of electrolytes, Gatorade may be substituted.
Food is much less critical than water initially for a sick bird. If the chicken is not eating independently, they can be fed by spoon, dropper, syringe or tube fed a liquid diet. Layer feed can be can be crushed with warm water or warm milk to make a soupy mash, which a sick chicken may find enticing when little else does.
Bird formula for hand-feeding.DIGESTIVE SUPPORT
A poultry veterinarian shared with me that they prescribe ProZyme to their sick patients. ProZyme helps sick chickens produce the enzymes needed to digest feed properly and makes feed ingredients more bio-available when they most need them. Add 1/4 teaspoon per 1 cup of feed.
DO NOT ALTER THE DIET
If the bird is eating and drinking normally, do not drastically change their diet by offering foods or supplements they do not ordinarily take- doing so can complicate the assessment and identification of the problem and make an unwell chicken feel even worse.
If herbal or other dietary supports have not already been a part of a chicken’s regular routine, they should not be offered during an illness. Work on building a healthy immune system after the chicken’s health crisis has passed.
For example, garlic. Who wants a dish of garlic or a shot of vinegar on their nightstand when they’re ill? I don’t and wouldn’t give that to a sick chicken either.
DO NOT TREAT or MEDICATE RANDOMLY
Without knowing what the underlying issue is, randomly treating or medicating a sick bird can make their condition much worse and complicate the ability to determine the real problem. Do not rush to offer de-wormers, antibiotics, garlic, vinegar, molasses or oregano to a sick chicken.
ABOUT ANTIBIOTICS
Antibiotics should not be offered to a sick chicken arbitrarily. Many illnesses share similar symptoms and determining whether the cause of an illness is bacterial or non-bacterial is only possible through laboratory testing.
Since antibiotics only treat bacterial infections they are useless and potentially harmful to chickens when:
-administered for a non-bacterial infection
-adminstered in the wrong dosage
-administered for the wrong period of time
-adminstered via the wrong route (eg: in the water, in the feed, injected into the muscle)
-the wrong type of antibiotic is being administered
The misuse of antibiotics can make the bird sicker and lead to antibiotic resistance in the flock. Only a treating veterinarian can prescribe antibiotics for laying hens. Learn more about this topic here.
This is Esther, a 4 year old Easter Egger who was put to sleep by her vet. Necropsy revealed that she had extensive reproductive cancer.
DO TROUBLE-SHOOT
In desperation, most of us without vets have or will turn to books or chicken-keeping friends for help trouble-shooting a sick chicken’s symptoms. The following questions can be useful in narrowing down the range of possible problems:
- What’s the age of the bird?
- When was the last time she laid an egg?
- Does she feel lighter or thinner than usual?
- How long have the symptoms been present?
- Any new additions to the flock recently?
- Any other birds in the flock exhibiting any similar or other symptoms of illness?
- Any bleeding, injury, broken bones, bruising or other sign of trauma?
- Is the bird eating and drinking, normally?
- If so, what does the daily diet consist of?
- Any changes in the diet recently?
- Could she have eaten something poisonous?
- Do the droppings look normal?
- Any worms in the droppings?
- Does her crop feel full/empty/hard/soft?
- Does the crop empty overnight? Is her abdomen hard, soft, full, squishy? Are there any dirty feathers near the vent?
- Any insects on the skin or feathers, particularly near the vent?
- Any unusual lesions on the body, under the skin, comb, wattles or in the mouth?
- Is she sneezing, coughing, wheezing, having trouble breathing?
- Is there any facial swelling?
- Is there any nasal/mouth or eye discharge?
- Watery or bubbly eyes?
RESOURCES
Tap into any/all of the state, local and national professional resources listed here as needed.
Once you have some idea about what could possibly be going on with your chicken, visit my Chicken Care Guide for common chicken ailments and at-home treatments when a vet is not an option. I highly recommend having The Chicken Health Handbook, 2nd ED, Damerow, Gail on hand for amateur diagnostics and trouble-shooting.
RE-INTEGRATE PROPERLY
When a sick chicken is well, they should be reintroduced to the flock as if they were a complete stranger to ensure a smooth transition, the least amount of stress possible and no violence. I recommend the Playpen Method for this purpose.
DO HAVE A EUTHANASIA PLAN
The worst case scenario is always death and sometimes the kindest thing we can do for a chicken beyond saving is to help end their suffering kindly. Many vets, even those that do not treat chickens, will agree to euthanize a sick or dying bird. Find out who those vets are in advance of needing one.
Locate your state veterinary diagnostic laboratory. Many labs will offer euthanasia services prior to a necropsy. Each state has a veterinary lab that will run tests and perform postmortem examinations on animals to determine the cause of death. Know where your lab is, how to contact them and which services they offer. **Always get a necropsy done on any bird that dies of unknown causes for the protection of the surviving flock members and for peace of mind.**
Euthanasia by Cervical Dislocation
In my experience, the fastest, least gruesome and most humane method of euthanasia is cervical dislocation or “breaking” the chicken’s neck, which causes instant unconsciousness and death. For precise instructions from poultry veterinarian Mike Petrik for executing this method properly click HERE.
You May Also Like
2 day old chick won't eat, very weak | BackYard Chickens
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
- Thread starter kvmommy
- Start date
Sort by date Sort by reaction score
kvmommy
Songster
I had one chick hatch from shipped eggs with very damaged air cells. We are all very much in love with this clingy sweet super tiny chick. But...she won't eat. She won't drink. She wants to be cuddled and sleep. She got pasty butt last night and her vent is a little red. I think its from not eating. She actually hatched about 29 hours ago but she clearly needs food. She is still very unsteady on her feet. How do I force her to eat? I love her so much.
SobbaChickens
Songster
Are to trying water with a dropper?
Hope all ends okay
-Katie
StripedBeaks
Hatching
I have had a few chicks like this before, try dipping her beak in a shallow pan of water, she will most likely drink some that way. As for food, i would wet some chick starter into a mush, then try to feed her some with your finger. If she still looks too weak and won't eat or drink alone, some unflavored pedialyte would do her some good. Hope this helps!
kvmommy
Songster
I dipped her beak in the water, I've added poly vi sol and made mush from the crumbles. She wouldn't touch it. So today I got a syringe and pedialyte and put a bit of poly vi sol in it got her to drink some then I added crumbles and got her to take some of that. It definitely gave her a boost but she still isn't eating. but she can stand upright now instead of falling and squatting. But she is still very unsteady. She pecks at my hands and clothes but will not peck food. I even tried a microscopic meal worm that is so small its smaller than the tiny piece of crumble and she didn't want it. She had green poop. Could it be coccidosis? If so, how do I treat?
Is it just hunger that makes her so unsteady and clumsy? I've never had a chick this clumsy 2 days after hatching. She is like a chick that is younger than 24 hours old. Or could it be neurological?
kvmommy
Songster
She is starting to eat wet mush but only if I hold the container in front of her vertically. If I lay it down and even if she follows it as soon as its horizontal she gets confused and won't eat. She also wont drink except from a dropper right in front of her face. I've never had a chick who couldn't eat right off the bat. She seems to get confused really easily. Getting stronger by the day. She still stumbles a lot and kinda walks sideways when she loses her balance but is getting better.
lazy gardener
Crossing the Road
kvmommy said:
She is starting to eat wet mush but only if I hold the container in front of her vertically. If I lay it down and even if she follows it as soon as its horizontal she gets confused and won't eat. She also wont drink except from a dropper right in front of her face. I've never had a chick who couldn't eat right off the bat. She seems to get confused really easily. Getting stronger by the day. She still stumbles a lot and kinda walks sideways when she loses her balance but is getting better.
Click to expand...
How old is she now? If she appears to have something neurological, you might try to get a very TINY bit of vitamin E into her.
kvmommy
Songster
She is going on day 4..still smaller than the average LF chick. She is eating so much now just very unsteady. I don't have Vit. E on hand, will more poly vi sol work? She is doing great and I love her even though she pesters me constantly. I have to hold her all day...one of the few times in my life I have a legitimate reason to want bigger boobs. My bra is the only place I can keep her safely and do stuff but its hard to keep her perched on a board. I wear my big bra and kinda tuck her in but now she is too squirmy for that. She started trying to peck the food down in front of her but keeps missing. The moment I hold it up in front of her, she is totally fine. Definitely neurological.
lazy gardener
Crossing the Road
kvmommy said:
She is going on day 4..still smaller than the average LF chick. She is eating so much now just very unsteady. I don't have Vit. E on hand, will more poly vi sol work? She is doing great and I love her even though she pesters me constantly. I have to hold her all day...one of the few times in my life I have a legitimate reason to want bigger boobs. My bra is the only place I can keep her safely and do stuff but its hard to keep her perched on a board. I wear my big bra and kinda tuck her in but now she is too squirmy for that. She started trying to peck the food down in front of her but keeps missing. The moment I hold it up in front of her, she is totally fine. Definitely neurological.
Click to expand...
I wouldn't give extra Poly-Vi-Sol. It'd be easy to over dose.
craigHartland
In the Brooder
i've got a chick which is exactly the same I really don't know what to do, I really dont want it to die
kvmommy
Songster
I gave her poly-vi-sol and a syringe with chick feed and pedialyte. Because she manifested neurolgoical problems I also dosed her with Vitamin b-12. I hand fed her for over a weak and kept her with me in my shirt for hours at a time. Then it she could only eat mush and still needed help drinking. Took about 3 weeks before she functioned pretty normally. It was sooo much stress and energy for one little chick...but She was the sweetest chicken ever and totally worth it. She would fly out of her box every morning and crawl under the sheets and sleep with me. She would sit on my shoulder and played chase with the kids around the yard. We absolutely loved her. She did have this weird clacking thing she developed. She would clack her beak over and over, all day and all night. Nothing fixed that. Last week she disappeared from her pen. We all cried. Good luck with yours...I hope she survives and turns out to be wonderful like ours.
Weak baby chick, drinking but not eating?
- henroo_101
- Raising Baby Chicks
- Replies
- 3
- Views
- 317
Wyorp Rock
Weak chick
- KrisPorterFarm
- Raising Baby Chicks
- Replies
- 8
- Views
- 228
KrisPorterFarm
4 day old chick not eating
- PedalPoweredPastures
- Raising Baby Chicks
- Replies
- 7
- Views
- 132
PedalPoweredPastures
Weak Chick - What Else Should I Be Doing?
- APKS
- Raising Baby Chicks
2
- Replies
- 16
- Views
- 832
Lkhags29
HELP: Protruding and bleeding vent
- Zomestead
- Raising Baby Chicks
2
- Replies
- 12
- Views
- 305
Idaho Chicken Bungalow
Share:
Reddit Pinterest Tumblr WhatsApp Email Share Link
Top Bottom
Articles - Southern Crown
No page found with this URL
404
Please check the URL and try again.
You can return to the main page of the site.
Or see the sitemap.
- Compound feed
- Compound feed for birds
- For broiler chickens
- For quail
- For laying hens
- For ducks
- for turkeys
- Compound feed for pigs
- For piglets
- For fattening pigs
- Compound feed for herbivores
- For rabbits
- For chinchillas
- Compound feed for cattle/MRS
- For calves/milk cows
- For goats/sheep
- Other feed
- Feed mix
- Raw material
- Compound feed for birds
- Premixes
- Premixes for birds
- For laying hens
- For breeding layers
- Premixes for pigs
- Premixes for herbivores
- Premixes for cattle
- Premixes for birds
- BVMK How to buy About the factory
- Points of sale Become a dealer
The benefits of our feeds
-
Precise balance of elements necessary for animal growth
-
Less consumption of feed - ingredients are absorbed more intensively
-
Delicious food - stimulates the active appearance of appetite
-
Increased immunity - animal deaths are reduced to a minimum
-
Only natural, pure and healthy raw materials
-
Animal weight gain is on average 5-15% higher than normal
Authorization
E-mail:
Wrong e-mail
Mandatory
Password
Wrong password
Mandatory
Authorization
You have successfully authorized on the site
Registration on the site
Email mail (login)
The E-mail
is incorrectly filled with the field filling out
Password
Password too simple
Field filling out
Repeat the password
Passwords,
Filling
FULL NAME
Filling up
Filling out filling out Fields are required
Phone
Incorrectly filled Phone
Field is required
By registering, I agree to the rules for the sale of goods and the user agreement
Security code
Password recovery
TODO: Feedback form
in footer. php in layout__modal modals
Product added successfully
To order, contact the manager at the specified number
8 (800) 250-73-90
Call
Or leave your phone number
Our employee will call you and answer all your questions in detail
Thank you!
Thank you, your application has been accepted
Our employee will call you and answer all your questions in detail
Articles - Southern Crown
No page found with this URL
404
Please check the URL and try again.
You can return to the main page of the site.
Or see the sitemap.
- Compound feed
- Compound feed for birds
- For broiler chickens
- For quail
- For laying hens
- For ducks
- for turkeys
- Compound feed for pigs
- For piglets
- For fattening pigs
- Compound feed for herbivores
- For rabbits
- For chinchillas
- Compound feed for cattle/MRS
- For calves/milk cows
- For goats/sheep
- Other feed
- Feed mix
- Raw material
- Compound feed for birds
- Premixes
- Premixes for birds
- For laying hens
- For breeding layers
- Premixes for pigs
- Premixes for herbivores
- Premixes for cattle
- Premixes for birds
- BVMK How to buy About the factory
- Points of sale Become a dealer
Benefits of our feeds
-
Precise balance of elements necessary for animal growth
-
Less consumption of feed - ingredients are absorbed more intensively
-
Delicious food - stimulates the active appearance of appetite
-
Increased immunity - animal deaths are reduced to a minimum
-
Only natural, pure and healthy raw materials
-
Animal weight gain is on average 5-15% higher than normal
Authorization
E-mail:
Wrong e-mail
Mandatory
Password
Wrong password
Mandatory
Authorization
You have successfully authorized on the site
Registration on the site
Email Mail (Login)
Filled E-mail
Filling a field is mandatory
Password
Password too simple
Filling a field, be sure to
Passwords,
Filling the field is necessarily
Filled incorrectly filled with incorrectly filled name
This field is required
Phone
Invalid phone number
Field is required
By registering, I agree to the rules for the sale of goods and the user agreement
Security code
Password recovery
TODO: Feedback form
in footer.