Ilovemychicks08
-Dogs are Gods way of saying your not alone-
I try to help all people and animals!You make the world a warmer place for us all
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I try to help all people and animals!You make the world a warmer place for us all
That's absolutely correct. Many birds died here this last couple of days, SW Missouri, where wind chills were in the negative 40s and temps 10 to 15 below for extended periods. There are places that are littered with dead birds. Almost no evergreens left for them and brushy fence rows have long been bulldozed out. Also, birds don't have combs and wattles. There are many differences, as you note. I have one rooster I noticed today that clearly got pretty serious frostbite on his comb and wattle and they were inside an unheated heavily strawed coop because they refused to come back outside after the snow and cold hit the first afternoon. They are just 8 months old and this was their first experience with severe cold temps and strong wind.Birds do die in winter, we find them in the woods after a cold snap. They make nests inside trees or in barns/house roofs. Animals or bugs eat the dead.
And chickens are not bred to live outside, they are bred to give an unnatural number of eggs and make minimal feathers. (Feathers cost feed and don't increase sale price of flesh or eggs.) My Leghorns lay 365 days a year, but they have lots of bald spots and no fat on them, two of them never have belly feathers, 3 are molting at the moment. (The timing is not genius, my RIRs did their molt weeks ago) Where my RIR have nice fluffy butts, they do not lay as often, and sometimes stop for a while younger than my LH.
Don't forget wild birds lay only to breed, in the spring, and put on a layer of fat before winter. They sleep through the cold temperatures by hibernating. They are not equal.
Battery hens with trimmed beaks don’t grow their beaks backYou probably know this but check their beaks - ex batts often have have their upper beaks trimmed off. They might not have grown back yet or might be growing back odd so that it is more difficult for them to eat than it should be. I don't know how long it takes for them to grow back.
I have a feisty girl too who is bossy and slaps me in face every time I put her down because she doesn’t like being picked up in the first placeBut still, they looked so miserable I went ahead and brought them in. Even my feistiest girl (who'll avoid me picking her up and will pinch me because she's a brat and the boss of the group) huddled into my arms like a big baby when I scooped her out of the coop. Each let me cuddle them as I brought them inside (and really only two of my six are cuddly so that says a lot to me). I like to err on the side of caution myself. It at least eases my anxiety and helps me sleep at night. Plus, I like to save money so usually it's only in the 50s Fahrenheit in my own home so they still get some cold. And it's not too different from the 30s-40s outside usually is.
Thank you, that makes sense.The reason for not rubbing combs that might be frost bitten is that the tissues are much more susceptiblame to damage from shear forces. It is similar to bed sores in people in this aspect.