thecatumbrella
Furiously Foraging
I've posted about Tilly, my sexed female Frizzle Mottled Cochin Bantam, before. Her energy levels have been off the charts since Day 1. That's not the problem.
She's a jerk to me and my husband.
We spend lots of gentle, calm time with our chicks. Slow and careful handling. "Bite" training with yelps and appropriate peck corrections. Now we're getting "attacked" (if you can call it that from something as small as a mouse) in the brooder. She postures and bites when I need to remove another chick for its vitamin treatment. Postures and bites when I clean shavings out of the food (I wait until she's under the plate, but she'll come out for a confrontation). Every bite gets her picked up, carried around, and bopped on the head.
My other two chicks are Silkies, and it's starting to affect my interactions with them. Seeing Tilly get constant corrections, snatched out of the air, listening to her constant cries as she's carried around in punishment... they're becoming fearful of us, because why wouldn't they?!
I have a sneaking suspicion that Tilly's a roo. I mean, she grew little wattles at two weeks-old.
Any advice? Has any re-homed a young chick before? We're about to hit 4 weeks of this BS. I'm leery of going down to two chicks for the integration period; if anything, Tilly is a nice buffer chick between the Silkies and the older Cochin Bantams. But I'm starting to feel done with this bird.
She's a jerk to me and my husband.
We spend lots of gentle, calm time with our chicks. Slow and careful handling. "Bite" training with yelps and appropriate peck corrections. Now we're getting "attacked" (if you can call it that from something as small as a mouse) in the brooder. She postures and bites when I need to remove another chick for its vitamin treatment. Postures and bites when I clean shavings out of the food (I wait until she's under the plate, but she'll come out for a confrontation). Every bite gets her picked up, carried around, and bopped on the head.
My other two chicks are Silkies, and it's starting to affect my interactions with them. Seeing Tilly get constant corrections, snatched out of the air, listening to her constant cries as she's carried around in punishment... they're becoming fearful of us, because why wouldn't they?!
I have a sneaking suspicion that Tilly's a roo. I mean, she grew little wattles at two weeks-old.
Any advice? Has any re-homed a young chick before? We're about to hit 4 weeks of this BS. I'm leery of going down to two chicks for the integration period; if anything, Tilly is a nice buffer chick between the Silkies and the older Cochin Bantams. But I'm starting to feel done with this bird.