Sincerely,
Slightly panicked human parents to be!
Merriam
I'm not expert but a bath everyday help females with the job.
Eggbinding & egg-laying problems is nothing to take lightly. I'd consult
with an avian vet asap.
--
Marco
- - - -
to email reply, my isp is not birdpoop, it's ameritech.net
"Once I wept for I had no shoes. Then I met a man with no feet, so I took
his
shoes. I mean, it wasn't as if he was going to need them.
Mineral oil and heat are about the only things you can do at home in my opinion
at this point.  But it sounds like this is more of an emergency and maybe needs
an avian vet to give her a calcium injection. 
While there, you can also talk to him/her about ways to increase the bird's
calcium intake, whether it be feeding oyster shell, using a product like
Calciboost, etc. Males can also show up calcium deficient, but for females that
are forming eggs, calcium needs go far and beyond what you might imagine.
Baths are very healthy during "eggnancy" and also while the hen is sitting on
the nest after she's laid.
Maggie
 Get her to a vet right away. She is eggbound through lack of calcium and is
in danger of dying unless you get to a vet who will administer calcium via
injection. After that you must try to either make sure she has a
calcium/vitamin D supplement in her diet, or cut down on the amount of
daylight she gets in the hope that it stops her laying eggs. Do not delay,
go to an avian vet as soon as you can.
---
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Ravl
>  Get her to a vet right away. She is eggbound through lack of calcium and
is
> in danger of dying unless you get to a vet who will administer calcium via
> injection. After that you must try to either make sure she has a
> calcium/vitamin D supplement in her diet, or cut down on the amount of
> daylight she gets in the hope that it stops her laying eggs. Do not delay,
> go to an avian vet as soon as you can.
i had 2 egg layers a few years back -one carried on like a one bird egg
factory,the second became egg bound first time,the vet sorted her out and
after that she never laid a single egg again -almost as if the trauma had
cured her of the desire.
what was strangest was that they were both a few years old at the time -but
different ages,and they both started at the same time.
--
gareth-quote of the day
'bring me my dinner wife'
What I do is I cut the egg in half and in a bowl, with a fork, mash
away. Nothing real labor intensive, but I get it to egg salad
consistency. I do concentrate on mashing the shell down a bit more, but
the egg is still chunky.  Some pieces are bigger than others and be sure
to offer a bit more than you think they'll eat because they tend to drop
a lot of it in their frenzy to eat it. My budgies love egg. If you're in
a hurry, you can micro a scrambled egg in less than a minute. No shell
though with this method.
Hope this helps!
Ravl
You could just give a 1/4 wedge of hard-boiled egg to each bird every 
couple of days or so.  Their beaks will take care of the egg in no time. 
 No need to mash at all!
Take care,
Pamela
San Diego, California, USA
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