- Jun 10, 2012
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It seems to me that scatter and hide would be better. That way there would be more possibility that the predator wouldn't find all of them. I used to have a Sumatra hen bred to a Cubalaya rooster and the chicks that she hatched would scatter and hide rather than run to mama. They had no trouble staying alive on completely free range conditions in southern Michigan. Someone took some of them, had them for a couple years and then sold the farm. They left the chickens to fend for themselves for two years and it seemed they had no trouble with it. Not only did they survive, they thrived and multiplied exponentially.A few years ago my boss mowed over a turkey nest while cutting hay.He gave me the eggs and I stuck them under a broody hen. They hatched out fine, but when threatened, the poults self defense response was scatter and hide instead of "run to mamma". This caused quit a bit of stress for the hen. Do you think this would help or hurt clutch survival? It obviously wouldn't work well in a neatly mowed lawn, but if they have cover, I wonder how it'd work.
I do enjoy watching a hen caring for chicks rather than "keep up or die" like wild turkeys tend do.
Edited to add, that the chicks flew very well by three weeks of age.