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The one I opened was fully formed, yolk mostly absorbed, and she saw that. I think part of the problem is that chicks don't look fluffy and cute until they're about a day old. They're small, slimy, almost reptilian looking balls of awkwardness until they fluff up.
What gets me is that if this was a $7500 Hyacinth Macaw, it wouldn't be "just eggs", whether my birds laid them or not, but because they're quail, somehow they're less pets. And maybe, if they were in a battery cage and used just for egg production and I was hatching for that reason - maybe, MAYBE I could understand. But mine aren't. They live in very large parrot and finch cages, with toys for enrichment and nice boxes to dust in, they're all played with every day, they know who I am and come running to the door to be scritched or given treats when they see me. (Well, the Coturnix do. The Buttons run around like crazed apes until I catch them, and then they chill out in my hands.)
It can't even be the "can't pick it up and cuddle it" factor some people have with most birds, because I pick up and cuddle all of mine, even the skittish ones. I go over my birds every day to check for health issues, check their nails and beaks, feathers, check crop and keel to make sure they're eating right, etc. I handle my birds more than I handle my cats, but like I said, if it had been a litter of kittens, the guest would have been wailing to beat the band.
I'm trying not to be bitter. It wasn't deliberate, it was an honest mistake and there's not much to do now but wait and see. Om mani padme hum. I have more eggs in the hatcher.
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Ugh. I have a doormat that says, "Pets are welcome in my home. Children must be leashed." I like children, but I find that generally I don't like the way their parents behave. When my friends started having babies, it really annoyed me that it was just kind of taken for granted that if the friend was coming over, the baby would be too and the house would be turned into a magical child-proof bubble.. and no.
-Spooky