How I Treat Non Fatal Wound From Predator (Warning: Graphic Images For Educational Purposes)

5-21-23
This morning I discovered Fiona--one of our Brahma hens--standing alone in a dog igloo (it's mostly there for decoration--they live in a covered run. All the other 34 hens looked fine but Monty, our rooster, seemed a little agitated. I went to check Fiona because I noticed she wasn't moving, just standing with her head down a little. Note: it's never good to see a chicken standing stock still during daylight hours, at least in my experience.


As I bent down to look at her I could see she was missing some feathers on her neck. So I gently picked her up and discovered she was injured and it looked like the work of a possum who hadn't been able to finish the job.
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As the first picture shows, the wound was not fatal but obviously bad. Flesh was missing, some of the muscle and fat was visible, and blood has begun to coagulate in and around the wound.
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This photo show the wound after rinsing it repeatedly with warm salt water and clipping most of the feathers involved in and around the wound. I took my time with this, carefully lifting away the small neck feathers before clipping them, one or two at a time. She seemed quite comfortable as long as I was slow and gentle. I did not want to remove blood clots but I did make sure everything was rinsed over and over again with warm salt water--I've had the best results in the past with this method: It reduces swelling, repels bacteria and helps dry wounds.

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This is the side view. It looked terrible but the more I cleaned, clipped and rinsed, the better it looked and the more Fiona perked up.

My rule of survival is: if the animal is eating and drinking (or shows an interest in it), and is pooping, they are probably going to be ok. In this case Fiona had good color--comb, wattles, clear eyes--not watering or glazed looking, and she loved the special food (oats, yogurt, chicken supplements). After she perked up a bit I gave her a full bath, which she sank right down into. She's had baths in the past and loves them. Then a careful blow drying until she was nice and fluffy again. Finally she was put in "the chicken hospital"--a large dog kennel in our storage room where she can recover in quiet and semi darkness for a few days. When she does return to the main flock her neck will have white zinc oxide powder on it to cover all redness. I might or might not bandage her. We'll see.
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Here she is recovering. I hope this was helpful to someone out there. I'll post an update when I get a chance. Thanks for stopping by.
About author
MomJones
Part time office work, full time dogs, cats and chickens. So grateful for my beloved husband who builds all the cool stuff we use. I process our meat birds humanely and peacefully and thank each one for her eggs and her life. Having chickens is such a blessing. We give away hundreds of eggs each year, we use their manure to feed our garden areas, we enjoy the soups we make from them, and we laugh at their silly antics.

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Good job! Nice article, clear pictures, very informative.
Thank you for the informative post with pictures. It's so helpful.
interesting pictures

Comments

What a nasty wound! I'm surprised she wasn't in shock, poor girl. Thank you for the very clear description of your assessment and treatment of her; please do let us know how her recovery goes. Certainly her familiarity & comfort being handled by you must have helped a lot, instead of being an additional stress. I'm new to chicken care and will definitely follow this in case any of my feathered charges should be injured in future.
 
Sending healing vibes to Fiona! Hope you'll update this at a later date with how her healing progresses.
 
Hi, I have an injured chicken. A leg injury I have determined and have her secure away from the 2 others that survived a fox attack.
 

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