I have never had a peabird with droopy wings to make it. I would separate it from the rest of the flock and worm them all. Also, pick the bird up and feel its breast to see if it is eating (you can compare it to his brothers). If it is thin, it could be a matter of the other birds not...
If you are on a budget the GQF forced air will do well for a pair of peas in terms of capacity and hatch success. Have not had good results from the Hovabators. If money is not a concern, then go ahead and get a cabinet.
I have had trouble putting whites in with blues. One starved to death last year after putting it in the pen with the others at about 6 months old. It actually died at the vet's office. Another younger chick died this year from unknown causes. This chick was hatched naturally and was left in...
I want to put her down but my wife is attached to the little thing. Anyway, I will get a vet to do the dirty work if we go that route. Thanks for the responses, and I agree that since peas spend nearly all of their time walking that the bird would have a hard life.
I have one peachick with a bad leg...bad enough to amputate. My question is: Can peafowl lead a fairyl normal life on one leg aside from mating. Thanks in advance. Mitch
That girl on top is just georgeous! She is split to white for sure. Which ones to keep? The ones you like the best as far as personality and how well suited they are to your particular environment. Does one stray off more than the other? Do they get along well with others? Is one more...
Peafowl reside quite peacefully with most types of pheasants. I never got along with my ringnecks as well as the peafowl did, so now my peas live with red goldens which are much more docile.