2013 first hatch photos

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Hey Grassman! At two weeks of age, emu chicks are rapidly gaining weight and very active and we try to maintain their brooder temperature at 80-85 degrees from day 11 to three weeks of age. They are on the verge of being a little large and active for chicks fresh out of the egg who need to get plenty of rest and are just gaining their strength to stand and take those first wobbly steps, learning to eat and drink. We try to keep the newly hatched birds at 88-92 degrees for the first ten days or so. Once the birds get to be a week old, they are running around and can be kept with the older birds with very little problems and you don't have to worry about them being constantly knocked down and run over by the larger birds. So you kinda have to play it by ear and judge when the newbies are ready to hold their own with the older chicks. Some may need only a few days to get their strength up, some may take a few days longer. But being only two weeks apart, you should be able to raise them all together once they reach a week or so in age...just make sure that they have plenty of room to run around. Hope this helps. ES
 
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Thank you - I understand. I do the same thing with my ducks. Over one week of age I can't put newly hatched chicks in the brooder because of the overly active older birds (one week is a lot of difference), so I have three brooders setups - problem as I see it is the size I will need with the Emus - I have the room, just want to plan it out correctly from the start.

Don't want to make mistakes with splayed legs or other problems because I do something wrong - I will continue to read and talk with others.
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Thanks for your message, however,we are not planning to ship any more eggs out this season. When we were shipping, we were mailing our eggs from a post office located in Maryland, as my office is just a couple of miles from the MD/VA state line. We only had one egg arrive cracked in over three months of mailings this season. We have two more planned hatches so I do not know at this time, if we will have any extra chicks that have not been reserved. If we do, I will post it in the BST Forum on this site, but you are welcome to contact us any time. We do not ship chicks, they are pick up only. Because of all the interests in eggs and chicks this season, we do plan on increasing our production next year. Good luck with your search.
Thanks again,
Bill
 
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ES Emus what do you feed them and how much do they eat? Also i have 40 acres all of which is fenced with 4 ft woven "farm & ranch" fence( 6 inch squares) that is 1 ft off the ground making it 5 ft high, is that high enough? If not i have an 8 acre bottom
pasture that i can redo. I was thinking of getting a couple chicks to raise and wanted to ask before i got them so i know what to expect and what i need to change.
Thanks
 

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