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Yaaaa not went to bed yet, muahahah! Wonderful news to find another chicken enthusiast!!! I loved my lil sebrights. My issue with them was the cold last winter! Lost every one from the severe cold. I am a lot more watchful of temps now for any of my bantams. They all go into my breezeway/porch if It drops below -0- and I have a separate coop that's better prepared to provide heat if needed.DH and I went to the State Fair yesterday (August 12). I was disappointed that there were not more Orpingtons, but learned what a lot of colors were for other breeds, and now I understand why people like Sebrights (how much cuter can you get?). My daughter was totally taken in by the bantams (of everything!). I told her nope. I grew up around bantams, and think they are gorgeous little packages of chickenness, but they don't fit into my plans. Does anybody have Sebrights housed with their standard-sized chickens? I would worry that my English Orps would accidentally squash them!
However, I agree with some other comments that many hens shown at the State Fair were missing all of their saddle feathers (and sometimes some head feathers, too). Can someone explain why a person would show a bird in that condition? Is getting a 3 or 4 that important to some folks? I'm not trying to sound accusatory. Maybe this is not unusual. I'm just asking because I want to learn.
Also, we saw a Cornish pullet that in my professional opinion was extremely ill and possibly dying. It laid in the same spot for four hours, raising its neck/head and gasping for air with eyes closed, and when I verbally startled it just a little on purpose to see if it could even get up, it did, and opened its poor swollen, runny eyes briefly. State Fair officials seemed nonchalant about the whole thing. I was not only concerned about this bird, but the birds around it. I saw it sneeze at least once in the direction of a neighbor. BTW, since it was one of only two in its class, it got a 2. We also saw a whole family videotaping her gasping for air because they thought it was funny. I disabused them of that notion in a hurry. I don't think they meant to be jerks--just ignorant. I don't know why this poor bird wasn't disqualified, but I don't know much about chicken shows (yet). I showed purebred cats for 15 years. Cat judges actually handle the cats, and if one felt feverish, the owner would be called up as a courtesy and given the opportunity to pull the entry instead of getting DQ'd. I could see that the levels of judging were very similar to cat show judging (within color/gender, then variety, then breed, then overall major type of bird).
Is any of this (the bad stuff) typical at poultry shows? I don't vaccinate against upper respiratory diseases because I don't have them, and never have, and Purdue does not recommend vaccinating against the upper respiratory viruses unless you have a problem because they are usually modified live and there is always a chance they can revert to wild, infectious type. So, you don't want to risk introducing a disease you don't already have in your flock.
Just wondered....
On a happier note, a guy in the dairy barn saw my Indiana BYC shirt and stopped to talk about chickens for 20 minutes or so. He went all in on his coop! A person could live there and be proud!
If there is not an issue of overcrowding and plenty of hiding areas the bantams do fine. Even with LF geese and turkeys, if RAISED TOGETHER. that's the key, they don't distrust birds they have grown up with or "cooped with" in a "see don't touch" pen. A turkey that's never seen a bantam will try to eat it! So the point is, if bantams join a LF flock, be sure they get exposure and separate quarters well before combining.
We have several members involved and their children too in fairs, and showing birds. Its fantastic for our kids to learn and appreciate our animals for what they give us and the histories of each breed. I can't get myself interested in "showing" because of seeing this illnesses at fairs also. I worked in animal control 5 years and to me, it is a complete contradiction of state law concerning animal care... And at the "state fair level", no less! It upsets me a lot. Every critter out there we keep deserves basic proper care. I do know of so many people that care very much about their animals not to let health issues go unattended, also. I guess after seeing the other sides of things, it really makes you not enjoy such events as much

It falls to the people responsible to observe whats coming in to be shown...and do their job. Even If they are volunteers, it still does not make it "OK" if an animal is ill.

