A question for you folks...I'm raising 35 Freedom Rangers, my first experiment with meat birds. I've tried to be sure they have adequate food and water, plenty of space and fresh air and tried not to get attached to them. Things got complicated when we had to evacuate the household, dogs, cat, 8 adult chickens and 35 5-week-old Freedom Rangers due to a forest fire and I ended up housing them in my sister-in-law's garage for 8 days. Due to the unusual living conditions, I ended up having to handle them more than I really wanted to, moving them from her garage into their mini-van coop every night. I always tried to grab them with both hands over their back and wings so that they didn't flap around, trying to make the transfer as calm and gentle as possible.
A week into the evacuation, I found a very kind person who agreed to "foster" my birds until we could pick them up. They have all sorts of chickens, other poultry and livestock and had a very roomy spare coop/run ready to go. I was sort of alarmed when we arrived and they just reached into the mobile-coop and grabbed the leg or legs of a bird in one hand and the leg or legs of a second in the other hand and transported them to the new coop upside-down. It seemed so... unkind, considering the way I've always handled them. I didn't say anything, just grateful to have a safe place out of my sister-in-laws garage, but what do you all think about handling chickens this way. Am I just a wuss? How do you pick up your chickens (other than the final time when I realize that hanging them by the legs may be part of your slaughtering technique)?
A week into the evacuation, I found a very kind person who agreed to "foster" my birds until we could pick them up. They have all sorts of chickens, other poultry and livestock and had a very roomy spare coop/run ready to go. I was sort of alarmed when we arrived and they just reached into the mobile-coop and grabbed the leg or legs of a bird in one hand and the leg or legs of a second in the other hand and transported them to the new coop upside-down. It seemed so... unkind, considering the way I've always handled them. I didn't say anything, just grateful to have a safe place out of my sister-in-laws garage, but what do you all think about handling chickens this way. Am I just a wuss? How do you pick up your chickens (other than the final time when I realize that hanging them by the legs may be part of your slaughtering technique)?