Labsandchickens8
Songster
- Oct 8, 2024
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I have had chicks from a feed store, from a local breeder, and raised by a broody. They all instinctively dust bathed in the shaving of their brooder, or in the case of the broody-raised, outside in the dirt.
I would think that the ex batt’s probably had the same instinct as chicks, but the behavior was suppressed due to lack of availability. If they are in cages or crowded situations, then they can’t/won’t dust bathe. When one of my hens settles down to dust bathe, she doesn’t like to be crowded by others, and won’t do it if I’m moving around the run or if there are other stressors around.
If they are still adjusting to a new environment (which takes time) and if they are stressed by poor health or overcrowding, then I would conjecture there may still be some mental pressure on them that would continue to repress dust bathing. I’m curious to see if they pick up (or rediscover?) the behavior over time.
Absolutely! I'm sure there are very good reasons why some scraps shouldn't be fed to some animals. But BSE was cause by adding homogenized sheep brain to cattle feed for commercial sale to farmers. (Of course only the feed producers knew what actually went into the feed then - much like now btw. I cannot imagine any farmer knowingly feeding his cows sheep brain - they all knew about scrapie.) Nobody got CJD from eating free range eggs. The blanket ban on feeding anything that's been in a kitchen to poultry is in my view completely OTT as a response to the awful BSE outbreak that followed such unnatural feeding practices.
Morning all so took many photos for tax
This the banty coop still have cockerel to leave .. Am thrilled with the hen ratio in there.View attachment 2925932
One year ago today this was occurring outside the coop complex.
View attachment 2930998
This is how they spent their day. By choice.
Ohhh, you've got a couple of those white hissy monsters.
What do you feed them?
You should definitely keep expressing your viewpoint - your very educated and experienced viewpoint. We can all learn from it and do the best we can for our own chickens.I have to address this.
This is a thread on a chicken site on the internet. None of what I write is a pesonal criticism. I am critical of a particular model of chicken keeping. If the reader sees elements of their chicken keeping arrangements in the content I write that is critical of a particular model then I can't be held responsible for that.
Here on BYC I am one of a very very small minority with relatively extreme views amoung a huge population of supporters of the chicken keeping model I have deep reservations about.
It makes it very difficult if people take my views as a personal criticism for me to write anything in case I upset someone.