The following can help you raise healthy chickens so they can provide you with eggs and happiness for years to come.
Use biosecurity to protect your chickens from disease
Biosecurity is a set of practices — things you do every day — that helps keep infectious organisms, such as viruses and bacteria, out of your chicken flock. If a disease-causing organism manages to find its way into your backyard chicken flock, the same biosecurity practices can help prevent the spread of the disease between your chickens, or the spread outside your flock to someone else’s chickens.
Biosecurity is the most important thing you can do to protect your chickens’ health, because if you wait to do something after an infectious disease shows up, you’ll find it extremely difficult, maybe impossible, to eradicate a disease from your flock.
Here are important biosecurity measures that are practical for most backyard flock keepers:
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Don’t mix chickens of different ages. Keep chickens of different age groups in separate pens.
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Clean and disinfect equipment between uses for different groups of chickens. Disease-causing germs spread by chickens can linger for weeks to months on unwashed stuff, such as transport coops, feeders, and waterers.
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Keep your chickens home. Don’t let them wander from the yard, or take them to places where birds mix, such as swap meets or shows, and then bring them back home.
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Quarantine new chickens at least 30 feet apart from the rest of your flock for 30 days. Don’t let them join the rest of your flock unless they fly through the quarantine period in perfect health.
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Don’t let your chickens mingle with other types of poultry, pet birds, or wild birds. Birds of a feather not only flock together, but they also share germs, mites, and intestinal worms.
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Don’t share equipment with other flock keepers unless it has been cleaned and disinfected first. Dirty equipment, such as a transport coop or incubator, can carry disease causing germs from one flock to another. .
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Limit visitors to your flock. If you do have visitors, ask them to wear clean shoes and wash their hands before interacting with your birds.
First aid kit for a backyard chicken flock
Your chicken-keeping philosophy will determine how well stocked your backyard flock first aid kit should be. At a minimum, every flock keeper should have a hospital cage in which to assess and isolate a sick or injured chicken, and have the ability to humanely euthanize a hopelessly ill bird. Other items you may find useful in your first aid kit are
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A spare heat lamp and bulb (non-shatterproof) or other heat source to warm a chilled bird (especially chicks). Steer clear of clamp-style heat lamps; get the kind you can hang securely from the ceiling.
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An electric fan, mister, or other cooling device to cool an overheated chicken.
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An antiseptic solution and a 10ml syringe for flushing wounds.
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A pair of forceps (tweezers) for examining wounds and picking out debris, and a pair of scissors for removing bandages.
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A package of gauze sponges for blotting and cleaning wounds.
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A method to stop bleeding, such as blood-stop powder, a styptic pencil, cornstarch, or a tea bag.
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A roll of 1-inch wide adhesive cloth bandaging tape, and a roll of 2-inch wide self-cling bandaging tape for dressing injured feet or wings.
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A package or bottle of a poultry vitamin and electrolyte preparation to mix with drinking water.
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A tube of water-based personal lubricant for dealing with a prolapsed vent or suspected egg-bound bird.
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Your veterinarian’s phone number.
Causes of common health problems in hens
Some of the problems that backyard chicken flock keepers most frequently see in their hens are respiratory illness, feather loss, and strange eggs.
The following contains some common causes for some chicken ailments. Other things could be responsible for the signs you’re seeing, but they’re less likely to be the culprits than the causes listed in the table. A veterinary diagnostic laboratory or a veterinarian who’s willing to see chickens can help you sort it out.
Problem | Signs | Common Cause | Possible Actions |
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Respiratory illness | Sneezing, coughing, gasping, swollen face | Mycoplasmosis (MG), infectious coryza, infectious bronchitis |
Isolate sick birds from the rest of the flock |
Feather loss | All over | Normal molt or louse infestation | Examine feather shafts for lice |
Head, neck, and shoulders | Feather pecking from flock mates, poking head through wire fence |
Observe flock for signs of feather pecking behavior | |
Hen’s back | Attention from the rooster | Provide hens with protective cloth saddles | |
Vent area | Feather pecking from flock mates | Provide toys and veggie scraps to keep the flock busy | |
Strange eggs | Thin shells | Old hen, hot weather, or lack of calcium in diet | Keep hens cool, provide oyster shell for the hens to eat |
Soft or no shells | A scare or a stressful event, or an infection of the oviduct |
Handle hens quietly and gently. Make their living quarters safe from predators. |
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Blood-stained shells | Young hen, underweight hen, or vent pecking by flock mates | Feed good quality layer diet. Place nest boxes no more than 18 inches off the ground. |
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Weird-shaped shells: ridges, chalky coating, lumps, and so on |
Stress, rough handling, too few nest boxes, or oviduct infection |
Provide more nest boxes. Handle hens quietly and gently. |