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Originally Posted by EeyoreD

Roosters aren't the only ones that chest bump/jump on other chicks as chicks right? Hens will do it to?

(please say yes otherwise I have 12 roosters and no hens)


I had a hen that bumped and jumped. She didn't lay very well but she could really crow loud. I guess that made up for the low egg production. In fact I don't believe she ever laid one. Oh well, she was one of my best looking hens ever.

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Am I weird for getting up at quarter-to-six to feed a week-old chick antibiotics?

My aunt says I'm the strangest teenager she's met (and she works in a high school, so that's saying something). I'm sixteen years old and I get up at six am most days.

In my defence, before daylight savings finished, I was getting up at seven am.

So am I weird?

Who feeds a chick antibiotics? In fact, exactly one drop of antibiotics (and that's the technical term the vet gave).
 
Also, if you cross a Welsummer with, say, and ISA Brown, will you still be able to sex the chicks at hatch, like you can with Welsummers? I'm just curious as I'll probably be crossing a Welsummer with an ISA Brown sometime this year.
 
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No your only weird if you think that I'm weird for waking up at 10:00 every morning haha
 
Is the chance of getting Marek's high if I don't vaccinate? I live in a town with very few chickens by the shore, and I am only going to have a flock of 7-10 birds. I might show them in 4-H sometimes, but I guess that's taking a risk right there huh? I was told you can vaccinate at any age, is this true?

As far as I know, chicks can only be vaccinated when they are very young. Like they do at the hatchery. I have been keeping chickens for five years and last year was the first time I had it in my flock. I lost a few of my "teenage" aged birds to it, but the birds that survived will have a natural immunity to it. Its not like if you don't vaccinate, you'll lose your whole flock. It affects younger birds more then adults too, in the "teenage" stage.
 
As far as I know, chicks can only be vaccinated when they are very young. Like they do at the hatchery. I have been keeping chickens for five years and last year was the first time I had it in my flock. I lost a few of my "teenage" aged birds to it, but the birds that survived will have a natural immunity to it. Its not like if you don't vaccinate, you'll lose your whole flock. It affects younger birds more then adults too, in the "teenage" stage.

Thank you. I talked with a poultry 4-H leader and she only vaccinates some of her chicks, but has never had a problem with the disease. I don't think I will vaccinate. It just seems too dangerous.
 
Will I ever get to the point where I'll be able to tell my chickens apart?

Also, am I the only one that thinks when chicks start growing their leg feathers it looks like they put little pants or leiderhosen on?
 
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