Quote:
I don't wince at all.
Like all cockatiels in the US, mine are many generations from the wild.
They were hand-tamed as babies and the older one, who is at least 15, is so thoroughly convinced that he's human that he has never been willing to breed but rather has spent his life considering me his mate.
They are ANIMALS, not humans. Having clipped wings and never having flown they don't know what flight is and haven't the human intelligence and imagination to understand what it means.
They have roomy living quarters, regular time out of the cage with me, regular attention from other members of my family, toys, abundant food, and the companionship of their own kind. I have no hesitation to define that as a good life. They are animal pets, not human slaves.
If the OP does a good job meeting his chickens' physical needs and provides sufficient environmental variety to meet their mental needs so that they don't develop the bad habits of captivity such as feather picking or egg-eating I have no hesitation in saying that those chickens would enjoy a good and worthwhile life. They're not human, both their intelligence and their imaginations are limited, and having known nothing else they would be incapable of understanding the difference.
I don't wince at all.
Like all cockatiels in the US, mine are many generations from the wild.
They were hand-tamed as babies and the older one, who is at least 15, is so thoroughly convinced that he's human that he has never been willing to breed but rather has spent his life considering me his mate.
They are ANIMALS, not humans. Having clipped wings and never having flown they don't know what flight is and haven't the human intelligence and imagination to understand what it means.
They have roomy living quarters, regular time out of the cage with me, regular attention from other members of my family, toys, abundant food, and the companionship of their own kind. I have no hesitation to define that as a good life. They are animal pets, not human slaves.
If the OP does a good job meeting his chickens' physical needs and provides sufficient environmental variety to meet their mental needs so that they don't develop the bad habits of captivity such as feather picking or egg-eating I have no hesitation in saying that those chickens would enjoy a good and worthwhile life. They're not human, both their intelligence and their imaginations are limited, and having known nothing else they would be incapable of understanding the difference.
