There is news update on my other peahen and her 3 young ins.
This is my first experience with free ranging peas, and I wanted to see if they would reproduce successfully in the wild. This particular peahen nested inside the protected fence area, the other pea did not and lost both her nest. Three (3) of the four eggs hatched, the chicks looked weak for the first couple of days, but by day 3 they were vibrant and energetic.
A week went by, and one of the chicks went missing, so that night I scooped the other two chicks up from their momma and kept them in a nice warm garage inside a small animal carrier; the next day I caught the mother and placed her in a pen with her chicks. Unfortunately, one of the 2 chicks was so weakened that is could barely walk and died hours later; the other chick survived and learned where the food hopper was and how to eat.
The one thing I learned out of this, is that pea chicks are slow learner, not as energetic as chicken chicks, and if there is another free range hatching, I will relocate them on day one. Peas are too valuable a bird to just let nature take it's coarse; they need a little help from us to prevent loosing them all as I almost did.
When I separated the mother from her chicks that night and returned the chicks to their momma the next day, I had a feeling that the stress of separation may have had something to do with the death of the one chick, because it looked ok when I caught it, but the next morning I could tell it was going to die.
I know that as a kid, we found some baby mocking bird and placed them in a shoe box; they refused to eat and kept crying for their momma, and the following day they were dead. It was hard to watch the pea chicks crying all night in the garage, and momma was freaking out, pacing back and forth, looking for her babies in the dark night.
If you have a story or experience that is similar, or if you have other advice, I'd sure like to hear from you.....thanks....JC