CloneFly
Never say Never
- Mar 8, 2022
- 1,239
- 5,595
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Hey y'all! So it happened again... I walked into a feed store (this time it was TSC) for something completely not chick related and happened to see dying baby chicks... this is how I got into chickens... and how 30% of my flock expanded. 
I'm not sure if these little guys will make it, but the whole fiasco got me thinking- what if I were to start up a formal chick rescue?
Pretty much, it would work like this:
Sick, lethargic, possibly deformed chicks, or poultry found at the feed store would be taken in and nurtured/healed (if possible) and around 5-8wks (or whenever they're better and are fully feathered) they would be rehomed? There would be a very reasonable "adoption fee" and a document that would need to be signed saying the bird is not intended for stew-pot use. Also some requirements of current or planned coop set up to ensure they're able to properly care for the chick/bird(s). There would be a website where people could browse available/adoptable birds as well as a mini bio on each.
I know this might seem like a silly idea to do on a semi-large scale, but I can’t bear to leave them once I see them... the guilt literally eats away at me. But I can’t have 40 chickens, 80 quail or 70 ducks either! (I do NOT have that many to be clear- this was in hyperbole). It was just an idea that struck me on the way home
Any thoughts or tips would be amazing and well appreciated. I've done animal rescue for several years, but majority of those rescues are either released or "rehomed" with us

I'm not sure if these little guys will make it, but the whole fiasco got me thinking- what if I were to start up a formal chick rescue?
Pretty much, it would work like this:
Sick, lethargic, possibly deformed chicks, or poultry found at the feed store would be taken in and nurtured/healed (if possible) and around 5-8wks (or whenever they're better and are fully feathered) they would be rehomed? There would be a very reasonable "adoption fee" and a document that would need to be signed saying the bird is not intended for stew-pot use. Also some requirements of current or planned coop set up to ensure they're able to properly care for the chick/bird(s). There would be a website where people could browse available/adoptable birds as well as a mini bio on each.
I know this might seem like a silly idea to do on a semi-large scale, but I can’t bear to leave them once I see them... the guilt literally eats away at me. But I can’t have 40 chickens, 80 quail or 70 ducks either! (I do NOT have that many to be clear- this was in hyperbole). It was just an idea that struck me on the way home
Any thoughts or tips would be amazing and well appreciated. I've done animal rescue for several years, but majority of those rescues are either released or "rehomed" with us
