pointy beak overbites?

Chickiemama1010

Songster
10 Years
Jan 16, 2010
217
2
109
Sullivan
Im putting this in the "baby chicks" section, because I suspect this is not a serious problem, but due to the fact that these chickens in question are in their youth...Maybe I am being paranoid, but I'd like some feedback to reassure me..

I have a dozen hatchery black australorps, and today was moving day for them! Out of the house and into the garage, then into "general population" in a few weeks. I handle them regularly, but I havent noticed this till today. They are 6 weeks old.

My fave cockerel (the keeper) has a significant "overbite." His top beak is much longer than his bottom beak, and the top one curves downward. I looked at the rest more closely, and I saw that about 4-5 others had the same thing going on.

Is this cuz they are young, living in pine chips and cardboard and havent learned to scrape/file their beaks yet? I see my adult flock rub their beaks on a tree, or the ground, or whatever is handy. they do it all the time. I also recall the parakeet I has as a kid having this rock thing to scrape his beak on to keep it from growing out of control.

Is this a real problem or will they fig it out? They just learned to sleep like chickens recently. On a perch, head tucked, etc. Not flat on their face, sprawled however they landed when they passed out, lol.
Or do I need to do something about this?

I also want to know if I need to choose a different roo. I really like Elmer. Hes big, strong, gentle, and human friendliest of all of them, pullets included. He was the only chick I got that had pasty butt, and I think since we spent so much "personal time" together cleaning up his butt, he and I have a certain understanding. Pasty butt got him his name (Paste=glue=Elmer's) and I am not a namer of livestock per se. But....I know hatchery chicks are not always "perfect" and if this is some kind of defect, I need to pick a different keeper roo. I have 6 all together, and 5 are going to the dinner table. Elmer was the keeper, but he cant be if he has a bad gene cuz he's also going to be the father of future generations, and I need a good roo for the job, in temperment, and quality.

Suggestions?
 
I had a columbian wyandotte do the same thing. She also feathered WAY late. Now she's the prettiest of the 4 and if she hadn't been banded I would never believe it. She got the hook off herself at about 9-10 weeks after moving outside. It never seemed to bother her, and it hasnt come back. Not sure if it is a problem genetically or not, but i would take hook-beaked friendly chickens over normal-beaked flighty ones any day so long as it didnt interfere with their health.
 
Well that's good to know. I guess I just wanted to be sure it wasn't a real problem. I'm not necessarily looking for show chickens, but of course I don't want to breed a neg trait into my future flock. And I'm with ya tamra I'd rather have pointy beaked well Behaved birds than normal beaked unfriendly ones too, as long as it wasn't causing health probs
 
My one silkie chick has the same thing. You can take an nail filer and file it down. As long as it could eat, I would leave it be.
 

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