I feel your pain as I recently nursed a couple of chicks that didn't make it. To me - my chickens are pets and livestock. But please try not to be too harsh to true farmers who raise livestock. If they thought of all their animals as pets they wouldn't be able to raise them up and send them to slaughter (which is generally the intended purpose of livestock, like it or not). Maybe you don't eat meat...idk...but I do. I know people on both sides of the fence as for caring for livestock (pets and business). Both sides are good people (I know there are some bad ones out there) and treat their animals humanely...just because they don't treat them as pets doesn't make them bad. And a true farmer is in business to make money (a little anyway) and vet bills and medication on a less than week old chick are in their mind (and mine) not a good business decision. If I had not already had the things on hand to nurse the chicks I did then I would have culled them. But I did nurse them and they still died, so those farmers would argue that I wasted perfectly good (and expensive) medicine...which I have to admit would be true. It may sound cruel to say "It's just a chicken" but what they are saying is that "life is about survival of the fittest". We're human so we tend to put human emotions on everything.
I'm sorry that you're feeling this pain. I'm glad that you have the compassion to care for the chick (and the time and money). I'm saddened that you think the farmer cruel for allowing nature to take it's course...He can't be all that bad....after all he did decide to bring you the second chick.
Best of luck to you.
I'm sorry that you're feeling this pain. I'm glad that you have the compassion to care for the chick (and the time and money). I'm saddened that you think the farmer cruel for allowing nature to take it's course...He can't be all that bad....after all he did decide to bring you the second chick.
Best of luck to you.