Not for you. She was in your lap right away!Young Lima went to sleep on my lap, but it was her choice. I didn't pick her up.
Of course, it is possible for a keeper to establish a low stress realtionship with a chicken, but ime that takes some time.
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Not for you. She was in your lap right away!Young Lima went to sleep on my lap, but it was her choice. I didn't pick her up.
Of course, it is possible for a keeper to establish a low stress realtionship with a chicken, but ime that takes some time.
Well my dear sharach sometimes I don't agree with you and this is yet another one of those. So brace yourself because here I come...But it wouldn't really help. Millions are killed each year. The solution to the problem isn't adopting a few. It's a complicated issue that needs something other than a knee jerk emotional response.
It's not that I don't appreciate the offers and there have been others. I have the money to keep them fed and treated for essential health issues. Despite how it may seem from the pictures these Ex Batts and Rescues have had a bit of a touch through the most unlikely circumstances. They've met someone who actually cares about them being chickens who has the time and commitment to make a small impprovement to what little life they have left.
If on the other hand people stopped buying chicken based food for their pets, ate less eggs, were prepared for even a 5 X increase in the price of eggs, etc etc then we might be talking. This isn't a Tesco advertisment where every little helps. In fact in this case I suspect that every liittle is possibly just making things worse.
I definitely crashed this party too!
And it has occurred to me that it was a bit rude of me to just show up uninvited and not even pay any tax!!!!!!!
So, in order to rectify my uncouthness….
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Oh look @BY Bob a cute fluffy buttI think I must owe some tax for the triple nested brackets there... so here's Sven, watching over a spa session
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I notice that you are in New Jersey.
In Britain, yes there is a law that chickens cannot be fed food scraps.
In the USA as a whole, there is no such law.
In individual US states, I don't know of any such laws, but I have not checked every state to be sure.
In some states of the US, there are laws against feeding food waste to pigs (most of them permit it under certain conditions, which vary by state.)
The basic point makes sense-- don't feed anything to animals that can spread disease, especially diseases that might spread to humans. But trying to make sensible laws about the matter is difficult. Laws usually don't get made until a problem has already happened, but when people are trying to fix the problem they sometimes make laws that go far enough to seem ridiculous.
You are not a terrible person for feeding food scraps to chickens as part of their diet, no matter where in the world you live.

And then there is the modern commerically raised breeds don't go broody.
There is just so much evidence that refutes this myth it's hard to know where to start.
I'll start with Ribh. Ribh has a very diverse group of chickens who have bit by bit decided that conventional wives tales don't apply to them.
How has this happened then. Perhaps Ribh might show us some pictures of the setup she used to have? I thought it was wonderfull. It looked like a jungle. You could tell that the chickens felt comfortable with their environment and also importantly with Ribh.
If Ribh had a rooster she would have chicks popping out from under the flower pots.
I got told when I first started looking after the chickens in Catalonia that they didn't go broody and that was because they were non broody breeds. The French Maransin particular have a reputation for being reluctant to sit and hatch. As soon as all the chickens had decided who and where they wanted to live and better accomodation and food was supplied first the bantams went broody and then the Marans. I didn't take their eggs. Each tribe had a rooster. There was plenty to eat. They built nests all over the place despite the very high predator load in the area. The environment they were living in changed and that was enough to make the difference.
It's really nice to see Blanche again.I definitely crashed this party too!
And it has occurred to me that it was a bit rude of me to just show up uninvited and not even pay any tax!!!!!!!
So, in order to rectify my uncouthness….
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If that is what you thought I meant, then I must have said it wrong.To read that their chickens eat more commercial feed when they free range than they do when confined is surprising to say the least.
I didn’t know that the farm’s wife was based off of an actual person. That’s a fun tidbit to know. I’m a musician and I think the music for the movie is brilliant. I always thought the storyline was basically The Great Escape told with chickens, rather than POW’s. There are many nods in the Chicken Run sound track to Elmer Bernstein’s fabulous sound track for The Great Escape.I forgot to mention that the film Chicken Run is based around the story of Wilma Steel who is the farmers wife in the film.