I have a 9-month old bantam living in a small wire crate for the last 2 months. I brought her indoors when she became paralized, then she gradually regained the ability to walk. After she got better, I noticed that she does not poop in her cage. When she wants to come out, she stands at the cage door and whines, and when I take her out she poops.
For the last 3 weeks, whenever she whines at the cage door, I pick her up and put her in a litterbox to poop. She always holds it from bedtime (around 6pm) until the next morning (8am). Today I left the cage open to see if she would go to the litterbox on her own. She came out of the cage and pooped next to the litterbox, but not in it.
I did not do any intentional training. Basically she developed this behavior on her own. When she was fully paralized, I put rolled towels around her in the cage to prop her up. It is possible that she now sees the cage as her nest, and does not want to poop in her nest.
I don't know if crate-training is useful for a chicken, but it is interesting to observe.
For the last 3 weeks, whenever she whines at the cage door, I pick her up and put her in a litterbox to poop. She always holds it from bedtime (around 6pm) until the next morning (8am). Today I left the cage open to see if she would go to the litterbox on her own. She came out of the cage and pooped next to the litterbox, but not in it.
I did not do any intentional training. Basically she developed this behavior on her own. When she was fully paralized, I put rolled towels around her in the cage to prop her up. It is possible that she now sees the cage as her nest, and does not want to poop in her nest.
I don't know if crate-training is useful for a chicken, but it is interesting to observe.