calichooks
Chirping
- Apr 17, 2020
- 80
- 150
- 81
In early April we received a wonderful peeping box. 8 golden comets, a cinnamon queen, a speckled sussex. We were so excited to raise chicks again that we hurried them into the brooder, and after a few hours, handled the little balls of fuzz. Then we noticed something, looking down on them...
One little golden chick... didn’t have any wings!
Contacted TSC, received a refund for her, and got a wingless little thing for free.
We toyed with the idea of giving her away, but you know, there’s no way to be sure that she’s getting good care unless you’re giving it to her yourself!
So here she is, six weeks later, nearly fully feathered and just as rambunctious and inquisitive as her other flock mates. She has 7 other girls her age and she gets along with them fabulously, she’s grown fast and has an attitude on her where she’s definitely not at the bottom of their pecking order. She’s sweet, curious, and really, really doesn’t understand she doesn’t have wings yet...
So what’s it like raising a wingless chick? Well for one, you’ll never see them properly roost. You’ll have to hold on to them a lot tighter when you hold them because they don’t know they’ll fall like a stone! They’ll want to run and flap like their flock mates but will end up jumping and falling onto their side. You have to make sure everything is accessible to them, because you technically have a disabled chicken on your hands.
She’s 6 weeks old and has no wing at all on one side, and a little nub on the other. It means when she does try to jump off of things to fly, she has a teensy bit of lift on one side, and always lands on her other side and not her feet. It’s hard seeing her take a leap of faith and end up wriggling in the ground because she’s bound to the earth. It’s hard when she tries to fly on to you because she wants to be held, and all you hear is a thud when you turn around and a little orange chick struggling to get back up.
But get back up she does! Again and again. She’s got hops, that’s for sure, because what she lacks in wing power, she’s got all in her feet! I imagine this is like what a kiwi or rhea would be like, flightless and all.
We’re still going to hope that she can lay eggs- we’re hoping nothings wrong internally with her. We have plans for speciality ramps to help her get up to roost, and eventually, we think she’s gonna get the idea that she can’t flap like her flock mates.
But, for now, half of us call her Dodo, the other half, Biscuit, And, personally, I call her Biscuit the Brick Johnson, because this little lady flies about as well as a brick.
One little golden chick... didn’t have any wings!
Contacted TSC, received a refund for her, and got a wingless little thing for free.
We toyed with the idea of giving her away, but you know, there’s no way to be sure that she’s getting good care unless you’re giving it to her yourself!
So here she is, six weeks later, nearly fully feathered and just as rambunctious and inquisitive as her other flock mates. She has 7 other girls her age and she gets along with them fabulously, she’s grown fast and has an attitude on her where she’s definitely not at the bottom of their pecking order. She’s sweet, curious, and really, really doesn’t understand she doesn’t have wings yet...
So what’s it like raising a wingless chick? Well for one, you’ll never see them properly roost. You’ll have to hold on to them a lot tighter when you hold them because they don’t know they’ll fall like a stone! They’ll want to run and flap like their flock mates but will end up jumping and falling onto their side. You have to make sure everything is accessible to them, because you technically have a disabled chicken on your hands.
She’s 6 weeks old and has no wing at all on one side, and a little nub on the other. It means when she does try to jump off of things to fly, she has a teensy bit of lift on one side, and always lands on her other side and not her feet. It’s hard seeing her take a leap of faith and end up wriggling in the ground because she’s bound to the earth. It’s hard when she tries to fly on to you because she wants to be held, and all you hear is a thud when you turn around and a little orange chick struggling to get back up.
But get back up she does! Again and again. She’s got hops, that’s for sure, because what she lacks in wing power, she’s got all in her feet! I imagine this is like what a kiwi or rhea would be like, flightless and all.
We’re still going to hope that she can lay eggs- we’re hoping nothings wrong internally with her. We have plans for speciality ramps to help her get up to roost, and eventually, we think she’s gonna get the idea that she can’t flap like her flock mates.
But, for now, half of us call her Dodo, the other half, Biscuit, And, personally, I call her Biscuit the Brick Johnson, because this little lady flies about as well as a brick.
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