Serama Hatch-A-Long!!

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My sweet boy Chip was a single chick. The only egg to hatch! I was planning to raise him like a chicken, but he got raised like a baby instead. With single chicks, it is a good idea to make a light weight brooder that you can easily carry around. If they are in sight of you, they will usually be pretty calm, provided there aren't other irritants (like other baby chicks that are Not The Mama.) I give them lots of little toys so they aren't bored. Things that are fun to poke, kick, or perch on. I also make it a point that if I'm sitting, I'm also holding. They love nearness with you, and will crave it pretty severely until they are almost-to-completely feathered. The upside? This makes the chicken the most special companion you can imagine. They become hams who think they are tiny people and will do everything they can to make you smile. They become everyone's favorite and are the perfect chicken to introduce to people just meeting your chooks to give them a good impression. If you ever thought having a house chicken might be fun, well, hatching a single chick is a great excuse to do it. Here's Chip in his droopy drawers. He's actually wearing a size Medium, because it's so large it fits him loosely, which is much more comfortable for him and the way serama stand. It also means the pocket is extra deep and the opening extra large.. harder for him to get poopy butt or to slip his diaper, a common problem with this model on other birds! The downside? TIME. They steal so much of your time and energy in the first two months! A house chicken is not for everyone, and not all singleton chicks take super well to being put in the coop.. they will still demand all your attention when you go out. My boy gets along with other chickens just fine now that he's grown... to a fault, even, he is a sweet little doormat. Feeds EVERYONE, even other roosters. He took to outside quickly too! But he still doesn't want to be apart from me (sleeps in my bed even, he is polite enough to not crow 'til I wake up.) He also sure doesn't breed. He doesn't know what to do with the two girls that have a crush on him. He'd rather seduce a slipper or soft blanket. Never made a mess, but still hilarious, and frustrating if it's a roo you intended to breed. If you don't want a house bird and he doesn't seem to be taking to the silkies and just continues to cry and cry, it might be worth it to consider re-homing him with someone who wants a house bird if you don't want to raise him, or to separate him again and raise him up with the plan to do that if he doesn't take to coop life once he's grown. The attitude of these birds is different. They don't know they are chickens, and they aren't always willing or able to learn. They become an individual who needs their husbandry adjusted and are much more demanding.. it's kind of like getting a dog when you expected an independent cat. Dogs are still great, but the difference is huge. I would discuss these possibilities with your family.
Our "outside" egg layers come and go in the house as they please for the most part. My top hen, a Speckled Sussex comes in every morning to lay an egg in a cat tree we have. We are pretty attached to our chickens. Getting Serama eggs, we knew we were getting a house chicken. :)
 
Our "outside" egg layers come and go in the house as they please for the most part. My top hen, a Speckled Sussex comes in every morning to lay an egg in a cat tree we have. We are pretty attached to our chickens. Getting Serama eggs, we knew we were getting a house chicken.
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I heard of someone using a bandana around their neck like a sling for their single chick. I thought it was a great idea to keep your hands free!
 
Sorry I haven't been posting here lately! I had 2 completely failed hatches (forgot to turn the egg turner on, then got sent some bunk eggs that were weird shaped and never developed.) I will just have to live vicariously through all your babies for now!

It's been almost a year since I posted about my first hatch here. I have 4 tiny pullets and 5 little roos to pick between for 3 pens. The rest of mine are 6 laying hens.. one I will probably sell w/a rooster, the other is a not-the-nicest blue who I might put in my outdoor coop because I've long adored her personality, and the rest I am impatient to get fertile eggs out of. Especially my Cleo! She's really extreme in type. I think I am going to try AI on her, since my house rooster doesn't know what to do with ladies but GOSH is he ever handsome. I just need to stop talking about it and actually do it. Crazy how much stuff changed in a year!

Sorry to hear about the failed hatches, that is always rough! Oh, the things we go through with our birds!

I am busy dealing with wry neck in a couple of Silkie chicks, one of which had me up in the night! They seem to be responding to treatment though so I am hopeful...
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My local Serama eggs are doing well. 7 out of 10 have perfect development and air cells. Which, makes me so happy because the last two attempts were total flops. Out of 30-something eggs, I got one chick, and he was an assisted hatch. BUT, they were shipped in very hot, very humid weather and one batch took 5 days to get here. Plus, it was my first time hatching and I think I meddled way too much with the candling. I have a bit more experience now, learned from my mistakes, ironed out some kinks in the incubator, got a fan, turner, and two extra thermometers/hydrometers for accuracy. And I've only candled once, so I'm very proud of myself. Lol Lockdown is due on the 24th, humidity and temp has been steady so far, so I'm feeling really good about these guys. Does anyone know how the lethal Serama gene works? I think it's something like, 25% don't make it. Is it that they quit early, die during hatch, or shortly after? If 7 make it to lock down, might I only expect 5 or so to make it? My singleton has adjusted to his Silkie friends very well. He still doesn't know he's a chicken, but his peeps are contented chatter rather than hollering. He's so funny, with his stubby little legs as he desperately tries to keep up with the others. He still gets a lot of our extra attention, which he absolutely loves. We call him "Zipp" because that's what he does. And the Silkies have been great with him. Even though they're only a couple days older, they seem to know that they're a lot bigger in size and look out for the little guy. What a great little flock we are going to have! I can't wait for the others to hatch. I don't know if it's Zipp in particular, or Seramas in general, but for such a tiny chicken, he sure does have a HUGE personality! We just love him!
 
My local Serama eggs are doing well. 7 out of 10 have perfect development and air cells. Which, makes me so happy because the last two attempts were total flops. Out of 30-something eggs, I got one chick, and he was an assisted hatch. BUT, they were shipped in very hot, very humid weather and one batch took 5 days to get here. Plus, it was my first time hatching and I think I meddled way too much with the candling. I have a bit more experience now, learned from my mistakes, ironed out some kinks in the incubator, got a fan, turner, and two extra thermometers/hydrometers for accuracy. And I've only candled once, so I'm very proud of myself. Lol Lockdown is due on the 24th, humidity and temp has been steady so far, so I'm feeling really good about these guys. Does anyone know how the lethal Serama gene works? I think it's something like, 25% don't make it. Is it that they quit early, die during hatch, or shortly after? If 7 make it to lock down, might I only expect 5 or so to make it? My singleton has adjusted to his Silkie friends very well. He still doesn't know he's a chicken, but his peeps are contented chatter rather than hollering. He's so funny, with his stubby little legs as he desperately tries to keep up with the others. He still gets a lot of our extra attention, which he absolutely loves. We call him "Zipp" because that's what he does. And the Silkies have been great with him. Even though they're only a couple days older, they seem to know that they're a lot bigger in size and look out for the little guy. What a great little flock we are going to have! I can't wait for the others to hatch. I don't know if it's Zipp in particular, or Seramas in general, but for such a tiny chicken, he sure does have a HUGE personality! We just love him!

I am so glad your newest eggs are doing so well! Local makes an immense difference. I can't say I really believe in the whole lethal gene thing. I think it is just their size that that makes them more challenging to hatch in an incubator and (like any egg) may, for many reasons, not pip or hatch, but I think the culprit is usually humidity being off. I have had plenty of 100% hatches, in the bator and under my good broody hens and had all the chicks live. I really haven't had any chicks that seemed healthy just doe all of a sudden. Ones that did die were ones that had a tough assist usually. If there really is a lethal gene, then I wouldn't worry about it.

I am glad the Silkies are being so sweet. I just love my Silkies, I love how sweet they are. The Seramas definitely have extra personality and I swear the roos have extra testosterone as well!
 
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Thank you Darkblue! Somebody posted a link about the lethal gene being attached to short legs. If their legs are too short they are unable to kick out of the shell. But short legs are a disqualification in show and can be bred out. This makes a lot of sense to me. Especially because the one that did survive was a long assisted hatch (almost 3 days!) and he has the shortest legs I've ever seen in my life. In fact we were going to ask people about it because he keeps falling on his back and sometimes needs help getting right side up again because his legs are just too short to be of any help. We weren't sure if it was a Serama thing or just our little guy. If we weren't with ours all day, every day he probably wouldn't survive. Left to nature I don't believe he would have made it out of the shell. Anyway it's something to look into if you breed them and it makes a lot of sense to me. More sense then mysteriously dropping dead out of nowhere, ya know? We don't plan on breeding ours, so the stubby legs and goofy shape just make him all that much more endearing to us. Lol
 

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