Love this guy, he’s a dandy!
Thank you! I just hope his tail stays down!

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Love this guy, he’s a dandy!

Don't think I have ever heard that expression before....."throwing money in a hog's butt" must be a Kentucky thing. A new one for my repertoire. I could sell the eggs but I have a hard time asking money from friends and neighbors. They do so much for me. I do sometimes use them to barter.
I don't think he could get ugly.
I know what you mean. Right now I can't put my hand in the brooder without a full onslaught- but the second they see no food they all back off. I got my chicks from a breeder that eats all aggressive birds though.
This is not the same behavior as food pecking. I do have many chicks that do that. This is a much more aggressive peck, and the body posture of the chicks doing it is very different from those looking for food, both before and after the peck.
You just have to be very gentle and very careful. If you "help" them too early on, it could be a situation like the first time I helped when the baby just wasnt ready to hatch. Also, many people don't help because "the strongest survive" and the chicks that can't hatch on their own are generally weaker overall than their hatchmates - not always, but generally. If you plan to breed what you hatch, you shouldn't breed any that need help out unless you know it was a user error that caused the problem (i.e. you forgot to add water and the humidity dropped, drying the membrane out, or you added too much water and got the other kind of sticky chick).
That doesnt really sound like aggressive behavior, just impatient chicken behavior. Lol. Some of my free ranging chickens do that when they're tired of waiting to be fed. There are one or two that stand by my leg and give my pants a pluck to insist that I feed them faster. Sometimes when Im wearing shorts or capris they peck my leg and it does smart a little. They're not doing it to bully me, just to hurry me along with feeding time. Lol
Yes.... I know better. I should not have interceded. The chick is strong but there is something wrong. It won't stand and it is not just because of curled toes. I will wait. Gus is very concerned about the chick and lays by the brooder. Very soon after getting chickens I adopted the policy of not going to great lengths to save every chicken. No husband to cull for me. I look at this little sweet bird and know I may have to do that.I have assisted many chicks over the years and the more I did it the more I kept seeing that those chicks just simply didnt thrive. I hated the thought of leaving the poor chick in the egg and not being strong enough to get out. But usually they are too weak to hatch usually for a reason. The end result was usually the same, I would have to ask my husband to cull the chick anyway because it wasnt able to walk normally or couldnt stand up. So I tend to let nature take its course now and that has been best for me. If I ordered hatching eggs and one of those were unable to hatch after pipping I have helped those but usually they end up having to be culled anyway.
@RedBanks let us know how your little chick is doing. It's a tough decision to leave them in the shell versus assist them, I know. I hope it is doing okay!
Oh it's not. I was referring to Tiegrsi saying his birds were just excited bout treats- his (her? Here we go again?) aren't being nice.