Hi all,
With our new home out more in the sticks (YAY!) we decided as part of our longterm goal of getting closer to the things we consume and increasing our self-sufficiency; we bought some chicks. This after we absolutely startled ourselves with 3 years in a row of being very successful vegetable gardeners! No one was more surprised than we were that we can grow food! Chicks will be 3 weeks old tomorrow or Friday. We are newbies to birds, but very experienced with other critters. So this is an awesome experiment as we are learning so much totally new stuff! It's like raising little dinosaurs!
I would love some ideas on good ways to tame the chicks, and help them grow up to be calm and happy. Not to the degree of pets, per se, but at least of very friendly acquaintances... if that makes sense.
Possibly important or not info : We have 10 chicks, 5 each of RIR and Barred Rocks. We want to end up with 4-5 hens, so we purchased 2x our goal as straight-run from a very nice poultry auction out here, and we hand-picked out ours from about 15 of each breed. Roosters appearing will either be sold or, if they are large enough, eaten. (We can't have roosters in this county, and I personally can get very grumpy at critters that repeatedly kill my sleep LOL, so even if roos were legal to we probably wouldn't keep them, at least not in our current property.) Chicks are living in our spare room right now, but as soon as they can manage temperature on their own they will have a bran new coop i am building for them in our bran-new poultry area of our yard, safe from our dogs and, presumably, most wildlife chicken connoisseurs. We want chickens for eggs, meat, bug stalkers, kitchen scraps devourers, and compost creators. Oh and entertainment, obviously.
Currently we have them swarming our hands when we call "ChickChickChick" with mealworms, and they are happy to sit on my shoulder or my lap and will often fall asleep on me, or even preen themselves (and me) when we are sitting with them. They don't freak out when we move the top of the brooder (rubbermaid container, LOL) anymore. Most of the 10 love to have their chests stroked, and all 10 are growing well - 1 is a bit smaller, but seems to be just as healthy, just smaller. When I put my hand in the brooder, almost immediately 2 or 3 of them will leap/fly/fall into my palm to be picked up. So I think our gut instincts for integrating them into our lives happily are fairly good. We recently moved them to a larger container, and not a one of them stressed about it. At all.
Every couple of days we give them something novel to stare at in utter distrust, such as crushed quail eggshells, a couple cherries, a spinach leaf, a new mini-perch ladder I made for them, and so on. What else do you like to give to your chicks to entertain and confuse them? What sort of other things are safe to let them try eating? Can we, for example, give them an earthworm? Would a small mirror be entertaining for them? Cuttle bone? When you offer a dust bath container, what do you use for the "dust"? Sand? When can we safely let them outside to scratch the planet and such? (supervised and safe, of course. Do we need to keep them indoors under the heat lamp until they can move to the coop, or are short forays into the outdoors okay? We're in a heatwave, for here anyhow, lately so outdoor temps are around 75-85. Sunday we will take their heat lamp temp down another 5° to 80° or so. We have a half-circle cage we can put them in for outside time, whenever that is safe to do.) Any other warnings or suggestions?
MUCH thanks in advance and here's a couple pics we took last night, since I know everyone loves baby photos!



~Tracy in the green half of Washington State
With our new home out more in the sticks (YAY!) we decided as part of our longterm goal of getting closer to the things we consume and increasing our self-sufficiency; we bought some chicks. This after we absolutely startled ourselves with 3 years in a row of being very successful vegetable gardeners! No one was more surprised than we were that we can grow food! Chicks will be 3 weeks old tomorrow or Friday. We are newbies to birds, but very experienced with other critters. So this is an awesome experiment as we are learning so much totally new stuff! It's like raising little dinosaurs!
I would love some ideas on good ways to tame the chicks, and help them grow up to be calm and happy. Not to the degree of pets, per se, but at least of very friendly acquaintances... if that makes sense.

Possibly important or not info : We have 10 chicks, 5 each of RIR and Barred Rocks. We want to end up with 4-5 hens, so we purchased 2x our goal as straight-run from a very nice poultry auction out here, and we hand-picked out ours from about 15 of each breed. Roosters appearing will either be sold or, if they are large enough, eaten. (We can't have roosters in this county, and I personally can get very grumpy at critters that repeatedly kill my sleep LOL, so even if roos were legal to we probably wouldn't keep them, at least not in our current property.) Chicks are living in our spare room right now, but as soon as they can manage temperature on their own they will have a bran new coop i am building for them in our bran-new poultry area of our yard, safe from our dogs and, presumably, most wildlife chicken connoisseurs. We want chickens for eggs, meat, bug stalkers, kitchen scraps devourers, and compost creators. Oh and entertainment, obviously.

Currently we have them swarming our hands when we call "ChickChickChick" with mealworms, and they are happy to sit on my shoulder or my lap and will often fall asleep on me, or even preen themselves (and me) when we are sitting with them. They don't freak out when we move the top of the brooder (rubbermaid container, LOL) anymore. Most of the 10 love to have their chests stroked, and all 10 are growing well - 1 is a bit smaller, but seems to be just as healthy, just smaller. When I put my hand in the brooder, almost immediately 2 or 3 of them will leap/fly/fall into my palm to be picked up. So I think our gut instincts for integrating them into our lives happily are fairly good. We recently moved them to a larger container, and not a one of them stressed about it. At all.
Every couple of days we give them something novel to stare at in utter distrust, such as crushed quail eggshells, a couple cherries, a spinach leaf, a new mini-perch ladder I made for them, and so on. What else do you like to give to your chicks to entertain and confuse them? What sort of other things are safe to let them try eating? Can we, for example, give them an earthworm? Would a small mirror be entertaining for them? Cuttle bone? When you offer a dust bath container, what do you use for the "dust"? Sand? When can we safely let them outside to scratch the planet and such? (supervised and safe, of course. Do we need to keep them indoors under the heat lamp until they can move to the coop, or are short forays into the outdoors okay? We're in a heatwave, for here anyhow, lately so outdoor temps are around 75-85. Sunday we will take their heat lamp temp down another 5° to 80° or so. We have a half-circle cage we can put them in for outside time, whenever that is safe to do.) Any other warnings or suggestions?
MUCH thanks in advance and here's a couple pics we took last night, since I know everyone loves baby photos!
~Tracy in the green half of Washington State
Last edited: