jxp
Crowing
- Aug 13, 2023
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I have a feeling this won't be your last set of babies. 

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Not even close, lol.I have a feeling this won't be your last set of babies.![]()
Aww!! So sweet!@jxp I was a bit concerned the 7 and 8 week olds might've gone feral since I hadn't been in the yard much this past week.
They ran initially when I went to pick them up, after I got one settled in my lap 4 others quickly joined in . . my heart wept . . .they missed me, they really really missed me.![]()
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Good timing with cooler weather coming on to check this for varmit patrol and control as well.I'll be checking the fenceline for gaps day olds might squeeze through.
Any other places a new chick might get stuck? Drops of more than a few inches with no way to get back up, or places they could get into but might seem like navigating through a maze to tiny baby brains if they don't already know the way out? Having a broody encouraging them will help but sometimes they just can't work out how to get out of a spot even if there is a useable route, especially when they're very young, and if it's not a place she can take the rest of the chicks to then the stuck chick will eventually have to be left so she can keep caring for the others.Anything else I hadn't thought of?
I actually haven't slept worrying about things like this. The hen house is elevated about 1ft and a half off the ground. I'm concerned once the chicks leave the nest they won't be able to get back in. There's a ramp, but still I worry.Any other places a new chick might get stuck? Drops of more than a few inches with no way to get back up, or places they could get into but might seem like navigating through a maze to tiny baby brains if they don't already know the way out? Having a broody encouraging them will help but sometimes they just can't work out how to get out of a spot even if there is a useable route, especially when they're very young, and if it's not a place she can take the rest of the chicks to then the stuck chick will eventually have to be left so she can keep caring for the others.
E.g. I have a couple of old tires lying around that my chickens like to perch on, but if I had a broody hatching chicks I'd be checking those were all either full of dirt/whatever so there wasn't a big jump to get back out, or adding a few brick steps. Lost a lot of unplanned hedge-hatched ducklings a few years back because their mums liked to hang out in the veg field and the babies would manage to get into the tires weighing down membrane on the unused beds and then weren't able to get back out again.