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Handling very young pet chicks: Yea or Nay?

post #1 of 105
Thread Starter 

I'm the proud new mom to one 4 week old Silkie and two 2-day old Silkies, Gigi, Fifi and Lola.  I've read conflicting info on whether to hold the young chicks or leave them alone.  I want them to think of me as "mommy."  Does often and gentle holding of them result in bonding for them?  (I know it does for me!)

post #2 of 105
welcome-byc.gif and congratulations on your new chicks!
As for holding, I definitely say yes, I spent a lot of time with my chickens when they were young, and as a result they grew up used to being around people and now have no qualms about flying onto my knee for a snack. wink.png
"I'm looking at nuclear power, not weapons - there's an 87% difference." ; )

My formal is tomorrow night. Yay!
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"I'm looking at nuclear power, not weapons - there's an 87% difference." ; )

My formal is tomorrow night. Yay!
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post #3 of 105
I also say hold them a lot. I hold my every day.
1 Silver Laced Wyandotte, 2 Gold Laced Wyandotte, 1 BLRW, 1 Columbian Wyandotte, 4 Rhode Island Red, 6 Easter Eggers, 3 Barred Rock, 3 Welsummer, 2 Buff Orpington, 2 White Leghorn, 2 Brown Leghorn, 3 Gold Sex Links, 2 Delaware, 1 Mixed Maran.    And a partridge in a pear tree... (just kidding on the partridge).
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1 Silver Laced Wyandotte, 2 Gold Laced Wyandotte, 1 BLRW, 1 Columbian Wyandotte, 4 Rhode Island Red, 6 Easter Eggers, 3 Barred Rock, 3 Welsummer, 2 Buff Orpington, 2 White Leghorn, 2 Brown Leghorn, 3 Gold Sex Links, 2 Delaware, 1 Mixed Maran.    And a partridge in a pear tree... (just kidding on the partridge).
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post #4 of 105
I held my chicks when they were a day old....

HOLD THEM LOTS!!!

Poem

Dreamin' of swans

No crested ducks

LMAO

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Poem

Dreamin' of swans

No crested ducks

LMAO

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post #5 of 105

I pretty much maul mine tongue.pngbig_smile.png They are just so cute! They need to be handled to get socialized. No different than any other animal IMO.

post #6 of 105

I agree. Hold them often! I watch TV with mine just to get them used to being around me. I had a group of chicks that I didn't get to handle a lot due to crazy work hours, and to this day, the birds from that group are not nearly as cuddly as my other birds. They also tend to spaz more when there is something new going on.

Permitted wildlife rehabber, specializing in the North American Bobcat

 

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Permitted wildlife rehabber, specializing in the North American Bobcat

 

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post #7 of 105
Although sometimes there'll just be an odd chicken with an anti-social personality who won't respond as well to the attention. I had one of those, and she still runs away when someone approaches, hanging around the back of the group during feeding. And she was one of the first too, meaning I used to spend a lot of time with her, being fascinated by having chickens. lol.png
"I'm looking at nuclear power, not weapons - there's an 87% difference." ; )

My formal is tomorrow night. Yay!
Reply
"I'm looking at nuclear power, not weapons - there's an 87% difference." ; )

My formal is tomorrow night. Yay!
Reply
post #8 of 105
Quote:
Originally Posted by Squawkbox View Post

I pretty much maul mine tongue.pngbig_smile.png



yuckyuck.gif

post #9 of 105

Definately yea! All of the chickens that I've had as chicks, I've handled and they turn out very friendly birds. We get some full-grown birds occasionally and they're very flightly, whereas when I go into the coop where they're mixed with the hand-raised ones, the hand-raised ones will come up to me and jump on me (even when I'm standing without food!), very friendly. As long as you're quite gentle, especially when they're very young, and don't hurt them, they'll be fine.

 

I have some 3-week-olds at the moment who I got at 1 week, they hadn't been handled much and were a little skittish but after two weeks of being in a brooder in one of the main rooms and being picked up and cuddled by any random family member who walks past, they're quite friendly and don't run to the other end of the brooder when someone comes anymore. They're happy to be held. In fact, I spent most of this afternoon with one on my shoulder and it hardly peeped because it was used to me.

 

Definately hold them, cuddle them, play with them, rub your nose against them... Seriously, try it! They're so soft! They tickle... anyway.

"And God said... bring forth abundantly... winged fowl that may fly above the earth... and God saw that it was good." (Genesis 1:20-21, paraphrased).

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"And God said... bring forth abundantly... winged fowl that may fly above the earth... and God saw that it was good." (Genesis 1:20-21, paraphrased).

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post #10 of 105

I made a brooding apron out of a towel so I could carry my chicks around with me when they were small. The only time we didn't handle the chicks was when they arrived in the mail at three days old. But after a day they were eating and hopping around and we handled them every day to socialize them as pets. Do supervise young children to keep baby chicks safe. I tell the kids the chickens get to decide if they want to be carried around and the silkies always say yes! In the winter my kids would tuck them in their jacket and they would take a little nap. 

 

chickA.jpg

 

chicksA.jpg

 

Dixie Erin 5-1-10.jpg


Edited by kittycooks - 3/18/12 at 6:26am
Raising 3 black silkies, 3 buff Orphingtons, 1 EE and 1 silver laced Wyandotte.
Explore chicken articles, daily egg count, GF recipes and more at www.kittycooks.com
Follow our autism therapy dog's story at www.rockythewonderdog.com
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Raising 3 black silkies, 3 buff Orphingtons, 1 EE and 1 silver laced Wyandotte.
Explore chicken articles, daily egg count, GF recipes and more at www.kittycooks.com
Follow our autism therapy dog's story at www.rockythewonderdog.com
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