Mystery injury / infection on chicken face

cheide

Chirping
Mar 24, 2023
31
98
79
Hello, and thanks in advance for your help :) I’ve looked through some posts and there’s so many or I can’t find anything quite like this…

my 2 year old jubilee orpington has this nasty thing on her face. I can’t tell if it’s coming from her ear? or maybe she was injured by something? it looked more scabby a couple weeks ago when I first noticed something looked strange. but now looks more wet. also looks like the tip of her beak is chipped…

I haven’t treated in any way. she’s acting normally. poo looks normal. all the other chickens look and are behaving normally. bedding is wood chips, wood bedding pellets.

ideas on what’s going on? how to treat?

thanks :)
 

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Aw poor girl, to me it looks like she may have gotten an injury. It does look like it is close to her ear, so check very closely to determine if/how involved her ear is. I’m not sure but the white parts might be fat or pus around the injury site, it’s hard to tell. She might have had a small injury initially that scabbed over and her flock mates opened it up again and made it worse even. She may need separated in a large crate yet still in site of the flock while it heals so they don’t peck at her.

If she were mine I would use some saline to rinse well and trim feathers away from the affected area and give it a super good look, share more pics if you’re stumped on what’s going on still. After you rinse and inspect, get some ointment such as neosporin (w/out pain relief) to keep on it while it heals. You can use neosporin in her ear too if it is injured.

Her beak looks like it may need trimmed up a little bit, at least evened out; a nail file will work well to do this. Be sure to look her over really well for other injuries, sometimes they hide injuries so well in all those feathers. Let us know if you think it’s a wound or something else once you look her over really well.
 
Aw poor girl, to me it looks like she may have gotten an injury. It does look like it is close to her ear, so check very closely to determine if/how involved her ear is. I’m not sure but the white parts might be fat or pus around the injury site, it’s hard to tell. She might have had a small injury initially that scabbed over and her flock mates opened it up again and made it worse even. She may need separated in a large crate yet still in site of the flock while it heals so they don’t peck at her.

If she were mine I would use some saline to rinse well and trim feathers away from the affected area and give it a super good look, share more pics if you’re stumped on what’s going on still. After you rinse and inspect, get some ointment such as neosporin (w/out pain relief) to keep on it while it heals. You can use neosporin in her ear too if it is injured.

Her beak looks like it may need trimmed up a little bit, at least evened out; a nail file will work well to do this. Be sure to look her over really well for other injuries, sometimes they hide injuries so well in all those feathers. Let us know if you think it’s a wound or something else once you look her over really well.
thank you so much!
I’m still new and of course this is my most skittish chicken. never squats squaks when I try to hold her. do you have tips on how best to handle her? should I wait until night after she goes to sleep when she’ll be more low-key? just get my husband to hold on tight?
thanks again!
 
thank you so much!
I’m still new and of course this is my most skittish chicken. never squats squaks when I try to hold her. do you have tips on how best to handle her? should I wait until night after she goes to sleep when she’ll be more low-key? just get my husband to hold on tight?
thanks again!
You’re welcome. A lot of chicken keepers do recommend trying to handle them at night, but mine still throw a fit and wingslap me when I try to pull them off the roost at night. I suppose it’s a little easier, but not much lol What I do is get a small dog crate to bring mine inside in, for ease of transport, then once inside, I use a towel to (gently, yet firmly) wrap around the body, pinning the wings to the sides. Be very careful not to squeeze or wrap too tightly while you do this. This helps a lot with the wing flapping and may settle her down enough to look closely at her head. I would enlist help for sure if it is available. Always easier with a helper to hold so you can have some free hands.

One of the educators has been tagged to take a look, let’s see if she has helpful advice, also.
 

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