Pet Chicken, Attitude Adjustment ADVICE needed

kareninthesun:

Thank you for your post!
---I do recognize his need to be a part of a flock. On a mental and social developement level, that is VERY important.
"Outside", I should take a moment to define in my situation... I live in the city, and I don't keep my birds outside. Dinka is in the garage with windows for sunlight, plenty of room to move, toys and obstacles to hide under and around. I take them for a forrage session every evening while I weed the postage stamp size garden that is my entire backyard. They get about two hours at minimum to chase bugs, eat all my veggie plants and dust bathe wildly. I should also note that I am aware that he will crow and this may become a problem. That's another bridge for another day. Weeble in particular gets to go to my garden center and spend all day running around there.

As to getting him a companion, my hen Dinka hatched three eggs last night. With any luck, in a few months I can start to work on integrating him with a real flock.

The work that your friends do sounds fascinating! It must be infuriating to them that people get cute and cuddly baby animals and think that they can control them without any understanding of what their nature and needs are as they mature. Then apon reaching adulthood, can't handle them.
---A couple years ago a friend of mine met some people that had an umbrella crested cockatoo. They were clearly fed up with him, and slowly killing him with poor care. Not to mention the mental and physical torture that he was enduring because they weren't prepared to own an older male parrot. He had lost nearly all of his feathers from picking and poor diet. They were feeding him ice cream and cheerios, and leaving him outside in freezing, autumn nights, in Michigan.... My friend took him away from that house because she couldn't leave him there. She wasn't prepared to own a parrot either. She fed him, and was gentle with him. He got all his feathers back (Amazingly). His name was Harley, and he was 32+ years old. She was his third owner. But she wasn't home enough to provide any stimulation, and when she was home he would scream and act out. It got to where she would scream back at him, and was getting frustrated enough that she just wouldn't go home. After one particularly bad night where he escaped the house, flew up in a tree and wouldn't come down, she told me she yelled at him that "he was on his own with the coons and he'd be lucky is he made it to morning". She called me the next day frustrated and fed up. Asked me if I wanted to drive to Florida so she could turn him loose. I got on the phone, started calling vets that specialized in birds and got the name of a lady in our state that WAS a part of parrot rescue. She took pitty on us and said we could drive him up to her. When we got there, she had an amazing aviary in her house. There were 6 cockatoos that all had their own cages and they were all integrated as a flock. One broody girl who was living in her desk drawer with her dummy eggs(and not a speck of dust anywhere!!!) and some other smaller birds that all had their own cages and social group situations. Only one bird was isolated. That bird was a wild captured African Grey, apparently she is vicious to the other birds. Her cage was even locked with a padlock. She breaks out of her cage, then into the other birds cages and tries to kill them. Harley was the only rescue at the house, and after a looong goodbye we left him in CAPABLE hands. My friend heard from her later that he had been accepted into the flock, they were working on some of his problems with men, and eventually found him a forever home where his social and physical needs would be fulfilled.



At full size, even if Weeble turns into the pissiest of evil little pistols, he's still never going to be lethal to a human. And so far he is maturing nicely. Mike and I have been using many of the suggestions that people have given us on here. With the current exception of a lacking same species social life, he is progressing nicely. And there is peace and normalcy in the house.
 
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Ok, am I the only one who is noticing that Weeble gets cuter with every photo taken of him?
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And to everyone in the throws of offendedness, please keep in mind what you would do in RL if something you said came off as unintentionally rude or callous: "Oh! I'm sorry, I really didn't mean it that way. This is what I meant...." To do otherwise just makes the other person even less impressed with your manners and less inclined to listen to what you have to say.

Now... back to Weeble watching...
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I have to admit, I am not the best at chicken "haircuts", lol! Between my handiwork and his sleeping with his head upside-down on the floor, he was looking pretty rough. Now that I've quit hacking his head feathers off and he's stopped sleeping on his head, he's STARTING to not look so stupid. Still, you should see video of him, I'm gonna have to set up a Youtube account and get a link posted, he still acts stoopid from the wry-neck. But he's our little weirdo and we love 'im!

He's off to the garden center today with Dad. It's his first time my other half has Weeble-sitted outside the house... it will be interesting to see how his day went. I'm still trying to come up with a poop-catcher design I like. The diapers designs online aren't my cup of tea. I am envisioning something more like what is used on horses. I found some lovely silver/grey silk in my fabric stash that matches his feathers perfectly. So he wouldn't look like he has a "baboon butt" diaper. Then line it with something utilitarian, or seal the fabric with weatherproofer to make it moisture resistant.... I dunno, gotta do some R & D.
 
the chicken belongs to you and certainly you have the right to try to integrate it as a pet, one of my roosters nearly got killed my a mink so I had him in icu for over a week (in the pet carrier in my kitchen with heat lamp) I'm so glad I did because he is the best rooster ever, always polite to the ladies, clucks and watches over the flock of 4 week olds with no mother, and doesn't pick fights..he still sleeps on my chair on the poarch at night only.
another rooster is just a meanie, but then, at 2 weeks first thing he did was peck at my hand, and I named him rocky, and he lived up to it...for aggression I think it's just a matter of projecting your attitude to them, use a tone when he's doing something you don't like for starters. He may just be flapping his wings a bit,
the point I'm trying to make is, if he's a bad bird, it would have been obvious from the beginning
by the way, rocky respects me tremendously, and has never attacked me - he's smart too. My husband says with parrots you grab them around the neck and hold it (gently) for pecking your supposed to hold the beak (careful of nostrils) for rooster, hold them upside down by their legs until they quit...I don't know if any of that truley works. Usually I just stare and say knock it off, and they back down. I think they all know instinctively that I'm the one who decides who goes into the oven.
Good luck with your bird, they are after all very adaptable!
 
Going to the garden center is the perfect arrangement at the moment! He gets to run around and forage for hours, there's endless amounts of baby frogs, insects & earthworms (a particular favorite). We are always digging in something, he is always right in the middle of it to make sure we're not hiding the good bits from him. When Mike got home with him the other day, he was so tuckered out from his adventures, he wouldn't even come out of the carrier. When I opened the door, he looked up at me, cooed, shut his eyes and fluffed his feathers out. It wasn't even his normal roosting hour, far from it. Mike said he had been trying to sleep between his feet for a couple hours, then on the car ride home started cooing his sleepy-time lullaby and zonked out. Mike has been digging a root cellar in the side of a hill, and apparently Weeble has been running up and down the giant mounds of dirt inspecting every inch...jumping and flying from the tops and playing "you can't catch me" in the mean time. Just generally being a happy bird.

So far, things are going very well. Thanks to the stories and suggestions on here, I think we were able to institute a pecking order with Weeble that has made him and us comfortable. When I did introduce him to my hen Dinka (the one who originally pecked him in the head so hard and so many times that he has brain damage now) last week, he shows the normal dominance and sexual inclination that a rooster would. Though he's not quite sure how to handle himself yet.... but there's time for that. Their meeting was supervised, and in the time since then she hatched a clutch of chicks, so he won't be going in with them yet. Currently he hasn't started to act out sexually towards Mike and I, or any of the other animals. Though he has singled out the P.B.R. beer box as a rival. Every once in a while he goes over to it and hackles up. But the box never fights back, so he looses interest quick. And to be honest, he doesn't even "attack" the box... more like, gives it a couple half hearted kicks, puffs his chest out, and then decides he won. I'm not interested in "training" him to do anything special, I'm happy with a simple pecking order.

At this time I think any additional photos and stories I have about Weeble's daily life as a house pet, I will move to a new thread under the stories and pictures section of the index, titled "Weeble Watchin". I want to thank everyone again for your contributions! You all gave me different perspectives to view things from, and I have considered, tried and will continue to try the different approaches and theologies that have been suggested here. If any issues come up, I know I can count on a variety of good natured suggestions!

Warm Regards To All-- Rachel
 
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Oh yes certainly! I wouldn't dream of leaving feces caked to his feathers and skin. He already has an area to move around in that he can go naked, and I would prefer to afford him as much time as possible in situations where he can forage "free". The "diaper" would only be employed for those times that he is loose in the house. At the moment, he has access to the pantry/sub-kitchen and the main kitchen (as visible in video). We keep two wash clothes handy to clean up his messes as he leaves them, this method works reasonably well. But a device that catches his dropping, while at the same time holding them away from contact with his body would allow him to spend more time out of his small enclosure, when we are in the house. It would also allow him to interact with his current perceived flock in a way that is more natural to him. When he is kept seperated from us, but can see us through a barrier, it causes him distress. He is essentially seperated from his flock and that seperation is against his natural drive. My dog exhibits the same type of behavior if she is excluded. Agitation, whining, pacing at the barrier... And naturally the contents of the "diaper" would be emptied frequently and the device itself would be cleaned regularly. There are days when it rains that he doesn't get to go outside, and winter is coming. That will be a long time to be relegated to a small enclosure.

Thank you for all your contributions! It has also been a pleasure reading through some of your threads about behavior. -- Best Regards, Rachel
 

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