I did my best! I only got one decent-ish picture because they were pretty upset about the process so I didn’t want to restrain them for longer than needed. I hope the watermelon I gave them afterwards is enough for them to forgive me ;-;
I haven’t seen them take any test flights so I don’t know...
After clipping their wings I can definitely see what you mean about the cut feathers being hidden. It doesn’t bother me as much as I thought it would, and it’s for the best in the end.
I’ll be sure to keep regular maintenance on them! Thank you very much :3
That sucks. But as I’ve read earlier, it seems the chances of them flying away and starving to death/getting killed in some other manner is a bigger risk.
That would definitely help. Mine are free ranged and unfortunately predators are an assured risk but it looks like clipping their wings is the best way to go.
Thank you, this is very helpful! Unfortunately we simply don’t have enough flat, open area for a run with adequate space for them, so clipping will have to be done if there’s a chance that they’ll fly off.
I’ll definitely see how they behave with one wing clipped, although the perfectionist in...
Thank you! I appreciate the info and I’ll be sure to clip their wings tomorrow before I let them out (after researching how to do it properly, of course).
I was mostly worried about how ethical it was due to how much I hear about how cruel it is to clip the wings of parrots and such. I wouldn’t...
So my brother recently got 4 mallards that have been given to me to care for. They’ve been doing quite a lot of “flying” around and he’s worried that they’ll fly away in a few weeks if we don’t clip their wings. So I just have a couple of questions about clipping.
1. Is it ethical?
I feel bad...
I only used the layer feed in a desperate attempt to get them to eat something. While I will eventually switch them over to the layer feed, it’s not a part of their current regular diet. Thank you for the advice, though :)
Thank you for the tip on setting up my location ^ - ^ I just finished...
I was thinking about the too clean environment thing as well but I’m not entirely sure that would be the reason. They have a 12x12 outdoor run area that they have access to all day everyday and it even has a dedicated dirt pit that I filled with soil for them to take dirt baths in (they’ll...
I meant 22% actually, lol, I don’t know how I managed to not notice the typo. My bad!
I try to keep the mixture between 10 and 15% wheat, and it’s just been what we’ve fed chicks from age 2 months and up for as long as I could remember. We use it for the protein and fiber.
Yes, that’s the one! And yes on the dosage as well. I put the chicks in at night and in the morning I take them out one-by-one so I can give them a pill and don’t accidentally overmedicate/miss one.
I’m sorry I didn’t respond sooner! I’m really bad about forgetting to check my socials and such.
Me and my dad discussed it and we looked at their poop and symptoms and he said that it was probably coccidiosis. The pills we’re giving them have amprolium in them and have seemed to finally...
I have a flock of 12 chicks (5 of them are 2 months old and 7 of them are 1 - 1 1/2 months old) and some of them have just stopped eating. They continue to act hungry and as if they want to eat—reaching their heads out of the coop to peck at the grass, scratching at the food I give them, coming...
I know it’s been a month, but I just realized that I forgot to reply, haha
Thank you! She did end up going back to her usual self the next day. Such a relief, I don’t think I could’ve stood to see her act so sad for even a week.
Logically I know that there’s very little that could’ve been and even less that I can do now. My main suspicion is that something got the poor little guy. If he had been sick or injured, the hen would’ve stayed with him. If he were stuck, he would be chirping and the hen would be with him...