Loopeend
Crowing
- Jun 12, 2018
- 1,039
- 2,351
- 276
It was the hardest for pheasants. They had these whole piece of ground walked out because they were doing the icebear thing al 5 days (is that what it is called in English? When an animal goes back and forth non-stop?). The fighting-origin chicken; especially roosters next to roosters placed together and seeing each other had a hard time too. Pretty sure some were frozen 5 days right next on top each other with an intence death-glare. Hamsters, rats, mouse, snakes, geese, a lot of rabbits, doves, other chicken species could not care less. Some even loved the attention. Saw a nice female campbell duck surounded by men of not all campbells that saw it as an dating oppurunityIt would be hard for Runners I’d think.

Call ducks weren't that bothered too.
You could clearly see the character of all kinds of breeds. Indian runners are in the middle. Like most. Not really stressed, but also not comfortable. It often depends then on which way they lean how they are raised. And Indian runners often look the most straight when scared.. mine are a little less scared so choose hiding instead of standing upright.. luckely the proffesional grading masters can see through that. I'm secretly the most happy that he was the most favourite of the children. I guess children look different at an animal. They do not look at how upright it stands; but how scared it is not. They can sense if an animal is just standing still and not moving because it is scared; and I guess see more emotion and chance to communicate with it when it is expressing emotions even though it are also not comfortable emotions. The other Indian runners where from breeders that.. hmm. How do you say it in English. Breed for the prize. You can see in the way how they put their animals in or out of the cages into the cage for transporting. Can't explain; maybe you just know what I mean. I'm also still babbling and overloading too much because it was so exciting
