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Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Boo Hoo Hoo!

Within twelve hours of the chicks being moved into their new home one of them died.  I didn't think it was a big deal.  50 freshly hatched poultry? Some just aren't going to make it.  When the death toll got up to five I started to feel pretty rotten.  I was checking the chicks twice daily for pasty butt and cleaning them gently, I also employed the technique of applying Vaseline after cleaning.  My mom came to visit and I thought the chicks had finally stabilized, the weakling had been weeded out.  I proudly led her out to the brooder and she took one look it and turned to me, "Katherine, two of your chicks are dead."

I was really starting to flip internally, what was going on?! The day before I had gotten some probiotic for their water to jump start their little flora populations.  The turkeys and ducks looked awesome and turkeys poults are supposed to be super sensitive! I had started to notice that some of the chicks appeared to have trouble breathing before they died.  I watched a few expire before my eyes.  I would notice that the chicks' breathing was labored and then they would fall on their side and seize a couple times before they bit it. The next morning I went to check on them and do my pasty butt detail.  A few of the chicks appeared to be breathing more rapidly than the others but all of them were up and moving.  I went to the other side of the brooder and I saw the Ancona duckling throwing her head back gasping.  I almost lost it.

I went to google and typed in "why are my chicks dying", I read through a list of possible illnesses and determined that it must be aspergillosis.  I wanted to punch myself in the face but it already felt like someone punched me in the throat as I choked down some tears and frustration.  The cause of aspergillosis is environmental.  The babies most likely inhaled mold spores from the wood chips (that I being thrifty borrowed from my backyard) and then the infection started.  The incubation period is 2-5 days.  Adam and I removed the wood chips immediately then sprayed bleach all over the brooder, we temporarily housed the chicks into large rubbermaid containers.  The duckling flipped onto her back in the rubbermaid and seized a couple times before she flat lined. She was one of the cutest things I have ever seen and watching her die before my eyes because of a mistake that I made cut me deep.  A decision that seemed SO arbitrary!

There are two kinds of aspergillosis, acute and chronic and even though I scoured the web there aren't any official treatments.  Acute as you may guess is rapid onset, that is what my chicks were presenting with so far.  But if some of them were infected the odds were that they all had it.  One website suggested Nystatin in the chick feed.  The same website said the mortality rate could be anywhere from 5-50%.  I took off for the feed store to see if they had any Nystatin before church.  It was there at the counter while I talked to the woman at the register that I lost my grip on composure.  All they had to do was ask, "What's wrong with them?" and then the tears just started flowing.  I seriously love the staff at our feed store.  A married couple works there, this ethnic looking dude with an accent and a beard and his wife who is a pretty plain jane with mousy hair.  I told them what I had found on the Internet and the wife told me they didn't have that medication in house, as her husband handed me a box of tissues.  She suggested I try Tylan.  I was torn.  The birds cost $60.  Should I really spend $40 on a treatment for a supposedly untreatable condition or should I just let it runs its course naturally and shell out another $60.  Money wise I should have gone with option b but in my heart I had to do something.  I lost four more chicks after I started the Tylan treatment, one was a turkey poult.


As of today the count is 31 chicks, 1 turkey, 1 duckling.  I think we are out of the woods ((knock on wood) haha, that's kind of punny).  Most of the chicks that I lost were bantams and the more exotic looking ones.  Kind of a bummer.

The day after I started treatment on the chicks I called Cackle Hatchery, just to see what they could do for me.  I was kind of relieved when the customer service woman told me that they would re-ship 12 chicks and 1 duckling if I bought two other poults, since their minimum shipping requirement is 15 birds.  I was set to get two more turkey poults when her stupid manager came over and put the cay-bosh on the whole thing.  So instead of replacements I got an apology.  I expected that from the beginning but I wish they hadn't yanked me around first.  Later in the morning I bought myself a pick-me-up present.

Carmen and Rico Our Newest Additions
 With my mom and daughters in tow I went out to Lemmon Valley to meet some hippie chicks with goat kids to spare.  Adam had made me promise not to get goats until after Burning Man.  I negotiated with him and ultimately we decided that "practice goats" would be a good idea.  The price of a good quality doe could be anywhere from $150-300.  That's a pretty big investment for us.  So "practice goats" were a good compromise.  These particular goats are drop kids from a dairy.  My understanding of a "drop kid" is that they are the kids produced when dairy nannies are freshened.  Typically dairy farmers cross breed their milkers with meat goats like Boers so that the offspring are dual purpose.  The kids that were available were mixes of Boer/French Alpine/Nubian.  I told the woman that I wanted two doelings and I really wanted to be able to get them disbudded.  There was one female around three weeks old that was presenting good dairy characteristics; slim hips, longish teats (proportionally), and a good "bag size".  The other doelings available were older with more prominent horns.  I had read that disbudding was possible up to three weeks old.  I didn't want to push it buying an older doe.  So I also picked out a two week old buckling.  Both kids had horns nubbing up through their fur, I called the equine hospital the farmer suggested and made an appointment. The soonest I could get was Friday.  The receptionist asked what their names were... uh...names?  My mom suggested Tacos.  It's never good to name your food.    In Pullman, our college town there was a bar called "Rico's" and a goat head was the logo.  I thought Carmel would be a good name for the girl because of her coloring but we couldn't decided whether to pronounce it Car-mel or Car-a-mel.  Carmen was just simpler and seemed a good pairing for Rico.  So after a day Adam and I decided Rico for the boy and Carmen for the girl.

I had read that breeding early can stunt growth.  Which might be a bad thing for some people but seemed strategic for us since our square footage is a premium.  Maybe I could keep Rico intact and just let nature take its course... Then I read further and that aside from impeding growth the chances of complications in labor increase exponentially.  So, yeah, add castration to that disbudding appointment. 

The kids had been bottle raised for a week and then put with a nurse goat.  So their bottle feeding skills were a little rusty.  We tried feeding them twice the first day.  Carmen went to town on the first feeding, Rico had no interest.  Later we tried again and neither of them took the nipple. 
My Hubbie has the Magic Touch

Rico Chowing Down

Tuesday Mom and I took the girls to the thrift shop and I got harnesses for the goats.  I really want to leash train them.  How cool will it be to take my kids for a walk with my goats.  SO COOL!  I was afraid that the harnesses I got would be too small since it seemed like most of the harnesses were for chihuahuas originally.  When I got home I was surprised to slip the harnesses on and watch them hang off the tiny kids.  Oh, well, they will grow into them.

I kept treating the chicks religiously and around Wednesday I discovered that aspergillosis is also called "Brooder Pneumonia", so I'm not the only person in the world affected. The chicks that had made it thus far seemed to be growing fine.  They had feathered out enough for quick flutters from one side of the brooder to the other. Even though their numbers had thinned, I still love just watching them peck around.

Friday arrived and I took the kids to visit a friend before the veterinary appointment.  The goats got chased around the back yard by hyperactive kids and an ornery dachshund.  It was pretty funny to watch.  My friends watched the girls while I took the kids to their appointment.  I was confronted with bad news at by the Vet.  Their horns were too big already.  She could try to disbud them but chances are that it would be a long painful process and the horns would grow back again since they were already established. Ugh!  She was able to band Rico, poor guy.  After she placed the band around his scrotum he bleated pitifully and crawled into my lap. She estimated that at maturity Carmen would be around 150 lbs and Rico would be close to 200 lbs.  Hmm... She said that breeding at five months would be fine particularly if I was breeding to a mini or dwarf buck.

So my new plan is to fatten Rico up all summer and when Carmen is five months to get her serviced by a breeder and hopefully that breeder will have a doe or doeling available. Rico is super cute right now but he is looking more delicious daily.




1 comment:

  1. what an adventure! and you have GOATS!!! ah, so cool. Hope your chick mortality has come to an end. What is the total animal count on your farm now?

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