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Agreed.Hello and welcome to BYC!Glad you joined.
I never remove crop contents by forcing a chicken to vomit. It can easily cause them to aspirate. Removing the contents alone will not cure her. You need to kill the yeast overgrowth. You can try miconazole suppositories fed orally to her. 1/4 suppository a day for 7 to 10 days. Or you can isolate her and give her acidified copper sulfate solution for her drinking water and use it to make a mash of her food. She would have to take the ACS water for 5 to 7 days.
I didn't want to. I wanted to wait until a vet could see her, but as usual with these things we discovered it on a Sunday, and it got very bad at round 11:00 pm on Sunday evening. When I could hear her gasping and choking, and I could hear her crop pressure gurgling from another room, I decided I needed to take action. They don't come with a manual and this is the first time I've run into this. I spent most of the day just trying to figure out what the problem was. I didn't know "sour crop" was a thing, and it wasn't until we realized she was gurgling and it was super loud that my google-fu lead me to the truth.Hello and welcome to BYC!Glad you joined.
I never remove crop contents by forcing a chicken to vomit. It can easily cause them to aspirate. Removing the contents alone will not cure her. You need to kill the yeast overgrowth. You can try miconazole suppositories fed orally to her. 1/4 suppository a day for 7 to 10 days. Or you can isolate her and give her acidified copper sulfate solution for her drinking water and use it to make a mash of her food. She would have to take the ACS water for 5 to 7 days.