- Oct 15, 2011
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Well, I have a one legged chick that we named Irene, it's pretty adorable and all but I also want it to have a good life. She is about 5 days old now and has started getting around fine hopping on the one leg but here is my concern. The bad leg is there and fully formed, it seems to function and articulate fine if I manually move it (I was checking to see what was wrong) but it stops working at the last joint so she can't actually put the foot down and it's kinda, um, stuck up there in the air. She has started to develop a callus on that, let's call it the knee joint which I think helps her slightly but the rest of the leg isn't good. So, do I try to take off some of the leg while she's still a chick or just leave her and see how it plays out? Anybody else ever have a chicken with only one leg? My concern is that this is an Australorp so she will be a big bird and if she doesn't turn out to be a she, she's going to be even bigger.
The only other egg in there that didn't hatch (I had 24 going) hadn't even pipped by the time all the others were out so I went to open it and see what happened. When I did there was a shrink wrapped chick in there, then I notice it's still alive so I pull off the membrane and it did a fair amount of bleeding. Anyway, I would have bet $25k that was a dead chick but after seriously 2 days of laying and doing nothing it is healthy as can be right now. There was no real point to that story other than they are both in the house together instead of the outside brooder.
The only other egg in there that didn't hatch (I had 24 going) hadn't even pipped by the time all the others were out so I went to open it and see what happened. When I did there was a shrink wrapped chick in there, then I notice it's still alive so I pull off the membrane and it did a fair amount of bleeding. Anyway, I would have bet $25k that was a dead chick but after seriously 2 days of laying and doing nothing it is healthy as can be right now. There was no real point to that story other than they are both in the house together instead of the outside brooder.