- Jun 26, 2009
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I have three kids 7 years old and younger. They are wild kids. Crazy, running around, tree climbing, knight-playing, busy busy kids.
I have a zero tolerance policy with any sort of non-desired behaviour with the animals (any of them - from my horse to my chicks - heck, even the fish have rules!).
When my chicks were teeny tiny, of of the kids would hold them too tightly. I showed, and showed, and showed,but every time, she squeezed too hard. So she would "loose" holding the chicks for that play period. She was allowed to sit, and let them come near her, but no holding. It really only took a few times to reinforce that I was serious about their behaviour.
I would suggest being VERY firm with your son. I would tell him exactly what he is allowed to do with the chickens. And if he does anything that is not allowed, he needs to "loose" the chickens (put the chickens away, send son in house, whatever). When teaching him HOW to interact with the chickens, I would suggest just picking one or two to work with at a time. Many chickens can be so overwhelming, and he may miss the lessons.
The other thing is total modeling, and talking about what you are doing while doing. "Do you see how she is running away from the flock? She is going the wrong way, and I need to direct her back to the flock and to the run. I'm walking calmly around her, to block her way back. See how she saw me? Now she is headed back to where she is supposed to be going."
I say this, as I caught my (very well trained and normally gentle with the hens) 7 year old kick (very very gently) a chicken. I lost it - sent him in to his room, and scooped up the chick and put her away. In discussing this with my son, it turns out he saw me "guiding" the chickens with my feet into their cage (I was blocking them from getting out), and he figured he could do the same.
He interpreted my guiding as kicking. We talked through that - I showed him how he can use his feet (get ahead of the chicken then stand still). My younger kids are not allowed to do that.
Kids are smart. Chasing the chickens is likely fun. My guys love to chase gulls at the dump, for example. Or pigeons who bother us on a picnic. But just because he wants too, doesn't mean he should be allowed to.
My 2 cents.
I have a zero tolerance policy with any sort of non-desired behaviour with the animals (any of them - from my horse to my chicks - heck, even the fish have rules!).
When my chicks were teeny tiny, of of the kids would hold them too tightly. I showed, and showed, and showed,but every time, she squeezed too hard. So she would "loose" holding the chicks for that play period. She was allowed to sit, and let them come near her, but no holding. It really only took a few times to reinforce that I was serious about their behaviour.
I would suggest being VERY firm with your son. I would tell him exactly what he is allowed to do with the chickens. And if he does anything that is not allowed, he needs to "loose" the chickens (put the chickens away, send son in house, whatever). When teaching him HOW to interact with the chickens, I would suggest just picking one or two to work with at a time. Many chickens can be so overwhelming, and he may miss the lessons.
The other thing is total modeling, and talking about what you are doing while doing. "Do you see how she is running away from the flock? She is going the wrong way, and I need to direct her back to the flock and to the run. I'm walking calmly around her, to block her way back. See how she saw me? Now she is headed back to where she is supposed to be going."
I say this, as I caught my (very well trained and normally gentle with the hens) 7 year old kick (very very gently) a chicken. I lost it - sent him in to his room, and scooped up the chick and put her away. In discussing this with my son, it turns out he saw me "guiding" the chickens with my feet into their cage (I was blocking them from getting out), and he figured he could do the same.
He interpreted my guiding as kicking. We talked through that - I showed him how he can use his feet (get ahead of the chicken then stand still). My younger kids are not allowed to do that.
Kids are smart. Chasing the chickens is likely fun. My guys love to chase gulls at the dump, for example. Or pigeons who bother us on a picnic. But just because he wants too, doesn't mean he should be allowed to.
My 2 cents.
