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I'm just a little paranoidNo need to peck her, she's showing them the ropes.![]()

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I'm just a little paranoidNo need to peck her, she's showing them the ropes.![]()
Awwwwe they are soooo cute!Enjoying their new freedom!
Integration is going wonderfully. The chicks have free reign over the whole run now for the whole day, then I bring them back to the brooder at night. They are using the whole run space now, instead of just hanging in their corner or only taking a few timid steps in. If they get too rowdy too close to one of the hens, they may take a beak to the head, but other than that, the hens ignore them, which is great. I spy on them through the run cameras (I have two) from my desk to make sure all is well. Here they are, peacefully scratching together:
Next step: bringing them into the coop itself for short periods during the day to get them used to it. I made them a huddle box that looks like their MHP, just minus the heat, so they’d have a familiar object in there and a safe place to sleep, until they decide to roost. I have a low roost less than a foot from the ground, too, in case they want to try that out. Then one 2’ from the ground, and the main one 4’ from the ground, which has no room for them, but I doubt they’d be allowed up there anyway. I might replace it with a longer one at some point.
Your boys are very handsome! And yeah, mine definitely look like pullets by comparison (even if questionable on their own). I don't have any recent pictures of my cockerels, but this is what they looked like at 4 weeks, with their combs and wattles already bigger and redder than their sisters' are now, more than a week later:At 5 weeks.... those combs are so small! Yes, my vote still remains. All pullets! I have a 4 week chick that has way more comb then yours!
This was Twinkie (my cockerel at 4 weeks)View attachment 2689556View attachment 2689559
I don’t have any pictures of him currently, but he is a definite roo.
Believe it or not, this is my second rooster Corndog. This was him at 5 weeks I believe:
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This is him now:
View attachment 2689562
So i think it’s safe to say... you kept your pullets!!!
Your Brown Chick looks very Similar too mine.I stayed up until 4am last night... I set a 15 minute timer on my phone and went to sleep in the guest room, got up to check on progress, set another 15 minutes, and so on for several hours. The chick that had trouble zipping did eventually start working around the egg, and by 4am had its back where the beak was initially, so I concluded that it must be able to turn after all, so I went to sleep in my bed. The kids woke me up around 7 to announce that there were 3 partridges in the incubator and a 4th that looked stuck... Sure enough, that same one was still having trouble. It hadn’t progressed since I left it 3 hours earlier, and was struggling with the shell. I didn’t want to lose it so close to the finish line and got worried it would dry out, get stuck and rip its skin off pulling. So I helped it the rest of the way out. The membrane had dried and was REALLY stuck all over its body, but I moistened it with warm water and it eventually peeled off without any damage. The baby is doing well now, drying off in the incubator with its buddy from this morning. The two from last night are running around the brooder pecking at toes right now.
Current count so far: 5 from my friend’s eggs and 4 from mine, a 5th from mine is starting to zip. The partridges all look different... The first is very red, the second very yellow, the third has a lot of brown/black on it, and the 4th is still quite wet so I can’t tell. This is a project breed and he’s still working on it, which would explain the color inconsistency. Makes it easier for me to tell the chicks apart, but I wonder what they’ll grow up to look like!
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