You can always try to straighten out their feet with chick shoes, but since they are bigger, they will have to wear them longer, and they will damage the chick shoes more in their use, so you'll be replacing them a lot. If you can just straighten out their toes, bind them to a popsicle stick with athletic tape, or make little wedge-shaped cardboard shoes (be careful b/c the underside might be very slick - you may want to put something on the underside with some grip, like drawer liner) and tape their toes to that. If they absolutely cannot manage to get around with toes taped in the proper position, you may need to make a big chick chair (basically a little hammock for them to hang in), and put them in it so their feet just touch the ground & they can stand if they really want to, wearing their chick shoes, but it lets them rest. I highly recommend pinning a piece of fabric over them in the chair so they can't escape. Make the chair with food & water readily accessible. Your chick may need a friend in the box/cage with him, and the friend will eat the food & spill the water & jump on top of the chick chair, but it is preferable to hearing your "patient" make lonely peeps. The good news is that once you can get them to use their toes properly, you're home free. And once they start using their toes (i.e. putting weight on them) the connective tissue and little foot muscles start to grow & be like they are supposed to be. It's much easier on little peepers, but anything shy of 20 weeks is worth a try. For the picking, I recommend blu-kote or powdered sulfur. As long as the thing causing the picking is remedied (such as overcrowding), they heal pretty well. A breeder I know puts things in the chick cage for them to focus on when picking is an issue - styrofoam, which they pick apart, or apples. Uncle Jimmy's makes an anti-pick block called a "Pecker Recker" just for this purpose. Hope this helps.