Where abouts are you located in Texas if I may ask i
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If I raise the peacock from just an egg or day old chick then that should increase the odds of him 'imprinting' on me and thus being more friendly right?
I have not tried it with a day old chick, but basically the idea of imprinting is the first thing that peachick should see when it hatches is you. Then it will think you are the mom and it will follow you around, call for you when you are not in the room, etc. I think the best thing to do is if you can, get an egg and hatch it. I have hatched several peachicks together and they were more interested in each other then me, but I could still handle them a little. They just wouldn't follow me or let me pet them.
I have all the time in the world. I'm looking for a companion animal in this peacock and as such I plan on devoting hours each day to its needs and otherwise spoiling it rotten any way that I can.
Just be careful about handling the bird too much. I didn't hold Peep too much when he got older because I didn't want to make him uncomfortable. Normally they would rather be perched on your shoulder, arm, or hand then to be held like a baby...There was one lady who would hold hers like a baby with the bird on its back and everything. When it got older she said it would attack her, but I don't know what she meant by attack. Attack could mean try to mate with her since for some that might look like an attack but it is not. When Peep got bigger I only picked him up to move him back into his pen. When you pick them up let them perch on one arm and with the other hold them close to your body because they don't like doors, so when you open the door to the pen they might want to flap a bit. As a little peachick though, you definitely want to handle them a lot because they really really want attention when they are little. To spoil the peachick take it outside to eat grass and other plants but don't take it out too late because it might feel compelled to fly up in a tree for the night if you take it out kinda late. (they have wonderful instincts and know what they can and can not eat when they are little, but still watch them because when peachicks are little they go through a phase of wanting to eat your hair, which is what Taco is going through right now. They grow out of this phase.) When Peep got too big for his playpen we moved him to a wire pen in the backyard that we could see from the kitchen window. At night we would leave on the heat lamp out there, and it would attract a bunch of bugs so Peep would be running around the pen eating all of the bugs that came to the light. It looked like a bunch of fun for him and I am sure it also helped give him some extra nutrients. You can feed them all kinds of stuff from fruit slices, lettuce, cabbage, unsalted unshelled peanuts... Here is a whole list of things:
http://www.bamboopeacock.com/Treats_for_Peafowl.html
Can living space make a difference in behavior? Would a large pen make a difference or potentially several pens with divisions where the birds could see and hear each other but not actually get together? I will have land to 'free range' them on but the truth is that Texas is FILLED with all sorts of critters that could potentially kill a peacock. Not to mention those invasive ants which I am sure could ruin any peahen eggs. I know those red ants are predators of Prairie Chicken eggs to the point where the Houston Zoo has put into place an action to get rid of them on hundreds of acres of prairie land. I need to look into ways I can take precautions about that.
Sometimes lots of ants like to come make their ant hills in the peafowl pen. In the past my dad has sprinkled ant killer around the outside of the pen when my peahens were nesting. I have not had any ant problems with eggs or peachicks yet and hopefully that won't become a problem! Some people get a good outside dog to defend their flock of birds. I know Zazouse has some wonderful outside dogs! I have had raccoon problems with my peafowl. Two or so years ago two large boar raccoons broke into the pen and killed my pied peacock Dragon. He was such a beautiful bird and I was so upset. Days later they killed one of my sweet peahens. We never could catch them in a trap, but we saw some dead coons on the road and thought they got ran over. Well this year a raccoon broke into the pen and killed a daughter of that pied peacock, and she was a very pretty peahen. We set up traps all around the pen and caught a big raccoon. I keep my birds at my Grandma's who is two miles away so I don't get to be there for my birds all the time so it makes it harder to watch out for them. I think almost all bird owners have to deal with predators at some point, and it is never fun. I keep 10 peafowl in about a 40x50 ft aviary that is 15ft. tall and slopes down to a six foot fence. I need to make more pens since 10 birds in one aviary make it hard to keep grass so there is no more grass, so I hope I can find the right space and number of birds to keep grass. I think the more space, the easier it is for birds to get out of each other's space. I have a mature four year old peacock and 2 two year old peacocks (they will be fully mature at three years old). The mature peacock has to assert his dominance to the younger boys so he chases them around and jumps on them to show them that he is the boss of the pen. I know if the pen was smaller this would be a lot more scarier or dangerous because there would be a bigger chance of the males being cornered or flying into the fence, but with all the space they can run and hide from the mature male. He only had to show them both once or twice that he was the boss, so normally these chases don't happen. What you could do is have a large pen and then some smaller pens attached to it and during the breeding season separate the males into their own pen, and then when it is not the spring or summer time you could put them all in one pen together. I think several people have large pens that they put all or most of their birds in when it is not breeding time. For pens I think people go by a rule of thumb that you should have 100 square feet per peacock.
I currently reside in Utah but I am moving back home to Texas. I was born in Amarillo as were my Mother and Grandmother and generations on back were born in Vernon and other parts of Texas.Where abouts are you located in Texas if I may ask i
Welcome to The Pea section where pea brains rule
Texas probably has cheeper land and also more land.
If you really want to see amazing aviaries check out these:
Here is a place in Texas:
http://texaspeafowl.com/pens_ideas_equip.html
This place has aviaries that are as good or better than most zoo aviaries.
http://www.pinola.net/Gallery.aspx
Those stumps were from some pine trees we had to cut down. I rolled them into the pen with some help from my peacock Peep. Peep jumped on the log while I was rolling it and he walked on it while I rolled. I put food on top of the stumps for them.
The big peacock is Alto. He is a four year old India blue.![]()
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