Bumpa-bits are here.
These are the real thing from Scotland. These seem to be the last resort for feather picking. The ones I have are the 30 mm size which seems to be the right size for chickens.
Bumpa-bits are widely used by game bird raisers. Game birds need to be able to fly so feather picking makes the birds worthless for their primary purpose. The way they work is, they attach to the beak holes and are usually installed with a tool made to install mechanical ring clips. The way they work is to prevent the bird from fully closing it's beak, so it can't grasp the feather to pull out. I can't imagine it wouldn't impact the birds ability to feed on small insects if they are free ranging. The manufacturer recommends the birds always have food available in a trough. I will see if I can make a video on the best way to install them.
While I don't know for sure, I believe feather picking is a behavior, like egg pecking that may be forgotten by their little chicken brains if they are prevented from continuing the behavior for some period of time. It's a tool similar to pin less peepers in that it's a mechanical device designed to control a vice.
I don't have any birds that feather pick so I won't have any practical experience on how they work. I bought them because the minimum is 500 and I didn't figure many individual chicken owners would want that many. My reason for making them available is, I hope my investing in the inventory and shipping them out will make people think I'm a good guy and out of gratitude will give Forco, the digestive supplement, a try. This may not be too coherent, but it's late at night.
The cost is $1.25 each plus shipping and handling which should run about $5.00 per order. I might establish a minimum later, but not now.
You can order by contacting me at
[email protected]
In addition to stopping feather picking, I understand the birds will begin to cluck in a Scottish brogue.
Jim Rea