Hi All,
I have a curiosity about mail order chicks vs non mail order chicks.
Early April I received some mail order chicks which seemed to be overly stressed during transportation (shipping container had been up-side-down and I ended up lossing 10 out of 22).
The remaining 12 are now over 5 weeks old and all are doing fine now. I remember these chicks being very loud (probably due to the stress of transportation). They always seemed to have a chatter about them, but nothing like the first day. I've become accustomed to the chirping chatter.
Yesterday I picked up a second batch of chicks that came from the same hatchery, but didn't come via USPS. I ordered them via a local farm store and since they had ordered 3,500 chicks they had there own delivery service (according to the manager).
There were 22 in my box and all seem to be very quiet and content. Most of the time I can't tell they are there. They are active ... eating, drinking, and sleeping ... they are just quieter.
Has anyone else noticed similar behaviors?
Thanks,
Scott
I have a curiosity about mail order chicks vs non mail order chicks.
Early April I received some mail order chicks which seemed to be overly stressed during transportation (shipping container had been up-side-down and I ended up lossing 10 out of 22).
The remaining 12 are now over 5 weeks old and all are doing fine now. I remember these chicks being very loud (probably due to the stress of transportation). They always seemed to have a chatter about them, but nothing like the first day. I've become accustomed to the chirping chatter.
Yesterday I picked up a second batch of chicks that came from the same hatchery, but didn't come via USPS. I ordered them via a local farm store and since they had ordered 3,500 chicks they had there own delivery service (according to the manager).
There were 22 in my box and all seem to be very quiet and content. Most of the time I can't tell they are there. They are active ... eating, drinking, and sleeping ... they are just quieter.
Has anyone else noticed similar behaviors?
Thanks,
Scott