Moodleroni
Songster
So I've noticed that since we (my husband & I) are new to chickening, that we may have inadvertently taught/trained our OG chickens to some weird .... lets call them.... moodleroni traditions.
in addition to talking to them like they speak human, we also try to speak chicken & my husband has become fluent in the "I found you some treats" bock-bocking that our roos do when they've found bugs to scratch for while roaming. As soon as they see my husband with the shovel, they come running. He digs & upturns certain areas in the yard to expose worms & little bugs and they all have a great time. We've been doing this since they transitioned into their outside coop last year.
Sometimes though, there'll be tons of worms, the chickens see them, sometimes do a short peck, but then they leave them to go find something else, and then other times the worms are eaten in the blink of an eye & they're left looking for more.
My question is, what would cause them not to eat one worm over another? Why wouldn't they just eat them all? Is there such a thing as a "bad worm"? I know it's not that they aren't hungry or something 'cuz they'll literally just leave it on the ground squirming after pecking it but eat a different one right next to it.
Any ideas? I can also tell my husband that it's just because he didn't 'bock-bock' correctly.
in addition to talking to them like they speak human, we also try to speak chicken & my husband has become fluent in the "I found you some treats" bock-bocking that our roos do when they've found bugs to scratch for while roaming. As soon as they see my husband with the shovel, they come running. He digs & upturns certain areas in the yard to expose worms & little bugs and they all have a great time. We've been doing this since they transitioned into their outside coop last year.
Sometimes though, there'll be tons of worms, the chickens see them, sometimes do a short peck, but then they leave them to go find something else, and then other times the worms are eaten in the blink of an eye & they're left looking for more.
My question is, what would cause them not to eat one worm over another? Why wouldn't they just eat them all? Is there such a thing as a "bad worm"? I know it's not that they aren't hungry or something 'cuz they'll literally just leave it on the ground squirming after pecking it but eat a different one right next to it.
Any ideas? I can also tell my husband that it's just because he didn't 'bock-bock' correctly.
