Actually they are small from malnutrition or having to work hard for a small meal. I and a few of my friends have raised feral chicks and they fill out beautifully in a calm and abundant environment.
I think us humans stand to learn more about ourselves watching other creatures. I read in another blog a gal said she wished she had chickens when she was young as it would have taught her all she needed to know about navigating her way through high school
I can't pretend to understand what goes through a chickens head. I just hope it is happiness when they see me. Even the freeloading ferals lol. I do believe chickens are much smarter than we give them credit for- just my 2 cents.
Yes, the nest and its perfect environment. I had an experienced 1/2 feral broody (who sat on flock eggs) toss out an egg from her nest. I thought she made a mistake so I put it back... twice. Well, the mistake was mine as she stank to high heaven when it exploded right b4 her hatch and I got to do the clean up. That was hundreds of years of instincts I was second guessing. Silly me.
Bless the wild chicken instincts. The mothers often drop them with me to fix and feed. I have four in my top brooder now. The mother showed them my set up and then abandoned them here. She is not the first to do this and it is not her first time either. I will fix them up, feed them and then release at our pasture 3 miles down the road when they are big enough so they can live their best life. I also have 3 ferals trapped to take down to pasture also. They have 24/7 access to water and trees and we throw scratch 2x a day. Not a bag gig.
View attachment 3137632Rejected and beat by mom I was able to capture all 4 by hand, give them some tylan in their water, cooked egg, some crumble and warmth. The wild chickens stress much more than my domestic. Get sicker faster and have many casualties. It is behoove of me to get them healthy and away from my flock.
Chicks raised by me usually stress less than chicks raised by my flock moms. I figure that if my rooster respects me as top dog and food provider I can also be head broody. I raise all chooks very close to each other from day one and I am sure that helps as intro is pretty seamless, though always good to have a nanny
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