Quote:
Whether you pet or cuddle your animals doesn't necessarily mean you love yours more than others love theirs...it just means that is the way you want to relate to your animals. It also doesn't mean your chickens are better socialized or more well-adjusted...it merely means they are more tame around humans. In my experience, a calm and happy chicken is one that spends the majority of its time developing socially within its own peer group. All my flocks have been quiet and content without any extra interaction from me....I rather like them getting to have their own life within my world, unhindered by my intrusive human presence.
Same with any animal that spends too much time in the house or with only human interaction...they seem to lose that certain something that defines their social standing within their peer group.
OK I slept on this, as I have chickens who seek human attention, and I wondered if I somehow ruined them by returning the sociable attention. So, I woke up this morning to my little hens who are THRILLED I am home on-call today, and literally all over me with cackles and happiness, as I will be patching the fence until the hospital calls me in.
Maybe chickens are not much different than any other creature, just as capable of making friends? Conversely, sometimes people reach out to animals for friendship. Koko the gorilla loved a kitten. That dogs love their human companions is indisputable. It happens. It's dawning on me that maybe this isn't such a big deal, that a chicken might be just plain friendly, maybe in the bigger picture of the whole cosmos, its just a matter of noticing it exists?
Yesterday a baby birdie called up at me from my front doorstep, so I picked it up before any of my kids could accidentally trample the poor thing. It's parent was closeby, so I struggled to get it OFF my hand/perch and onto my fencepost, as the parent attempted to continue feeding it while still on me, and I thought, "I don't have time to be a perch today". The baby bird wanted ME, not the fence post. It was adorable. A poultry breeder might say I have a dominant St. Francis gene: