Shadrach's Ex Battery and Rescued chickens thread.

It's the stabilizing muscles firing little pulses to keep one balanced. Most people don't really include these muscles in exercise routines so they tend to be lacking in people who don't prioritize them with balance/yoga/core strength oriented exercises. They're made of slow twitch fibers, so I guess anything involving quick pulses pushes them a little harder than other methods, at least it feels that way to me. I've started pulse crunches as part of my weekly exercise and they feel pretty brutal :D

Tax: Gregg rulez
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40 seconds now. Right leg was badly broken years ago but oddly, it's more stable than my left which I haven't broken yet.:p
I was just shocked at how much my balance had deteriorated over the last five years. I do something about it every day.
 
There are quite a lot of reasons given with respect to the best known exponents of the behaviour (flamingos), though evidently at least one of them (their biomechanics) may well be inapplicable to chickens
https://bird-life.com/why-flamingos-stand-on-one-leg-the-real-reason-1-5504/
I thought the bit about unihemispheric slow wave sleep was particularly interesting. USWS is something I've talked about before because I think it's really cool, but I never considered the role it could play in resting on one leg. If one leg is controlled by the "awake" hemisphere and one is controlled by the "asleep" hemisphere, it seems intuitive to balance on one leg rather than coordinate both of them together.

An interesting sidebar on this: birds are capable of unihemispheric sleep because unlike eutherian mammals, which are the only animals with a corpus callosum, birds have no equivalent structure connecting the two hemispheres of the brain. The communication between these hemispheres is much more limited than with us. It's interesting to think about how their perspectives/consciousness might differ from ours. Is each bird really a pair of intimately connected individuals? I guess nobody is sure.

Further reading if anyone's interested:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7116194/
 
birds have no equivalent structure connecting the two hemispheres of the brain. The communication between these hemispheres is much more limited than with us. It's interesting to think about how their perspectives/consciousness might differ from ours. Is each bird really a pair of intimately connected individuals? I guess nobody is sure.
I'm going to (not very seriously) choose to believe this is why a few of mine will happily jump the gate several times a day when they want to leave the chicken plot, but run back and forth in confusion and panic if the gate isn't open when they want to get back in.
 
I'm going to (not very seriously) choose to believe this is why a few of mine will happily jump the gate several times a day when they want to leave the chicken plot, but run back and forth in confusion and panic if the gate isn't open when they want to get back in.
"Birdbrains"?
:gig
 
I'm going to (not very seriously) choose to believe this is why a few of mine will happily jump the gate several times a day when they want to leave the chicken plot, but run back and forth in confusion and panic if the gate isn't open when they want to get back in.
If it helps, the left hemisphere dominates tasks that require more focus, while the right hemisphere has a more broad attention. Simply put, the left hyperfixates and the right is easily distracted. Incorporate this however you like next time you tease them :P
 
I thought the bit about unihemispheric slow wave sleep was particularly interesting. USWS is something I've talked about before because I think it's really cool, but I never considered the role it could play in resting on one leg. If one leg is controlled by the "awake" hemisphere and one is controlled by the "asleep" hemisphere, it seems intuitive to balance on one leg rather than coordinate both of them together.

An interesting sidebar on this: birds are capable of unihemispheric sleep because unlike eutherian mammals, which are the only animals with a corpus callosum, birds have no equivalent structure connecting the two hemispheres of the brain. The communication between these hemispheres is much more limited than with us. It's interesting to think about how their perspectives/consciousness might differ from ours. Is each bird really a pair of intimately connected individuals? I guess nobody is sure.

Further reading if anyone's interested:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7116194/
that paper opened up a whole new area for me; thanks for linking.

On the one-leg though, I thought the message of the bird-life piece was that the locked leg mechanism needed no active control, and even worked with flamingo cadavers. Maybe we should try to find the research papers on which the bird-life piece is based?
 
Other than the days of incredible cold, when I see the girls on one foot, they’re doing their stretches.

The free foot goes backwards. The wings go out; not flapping, just extending, and their entire bodies seem to expand for a moment. They hold the pose a few moments, and then go back to the all-important task of scratching.
I love watching mine do this :)
 
Sad day here - Muffin died last night. She actually lasted longer than I expected, I probably should have culled at the end of last week but I was ill and no-one else here can/will do it. I still really struggle with the ethics of deciding when is the right time to intervene.
That's 3 of the 5 old ladies gone since we moved here 6 months ago. Sorry will stop moping now.

On the plus side, both our lovely pullets are now laying so we're finally getting 2 eggs a day after 5 months with no eggs at all :)
IMG_1581 Large.jpeg
 
Sad day here - Muffin died last night. She actually lasted longer than I expected, I probably should have culled at the end of last week but I was ill and no-one else here can/will do it. I still really struggle with the ethics of deciding when is the right time to intervene.
That's 3 of the 5 old ladies gone since we moved here 6 months ago. Sorry will stop moping now.

On the plus side, both our lovely pullets are now laying so we're finally getting 2 eggs a day after 5 months with no eggs at all :)
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Sorry for your losses
 
Sad day here - Muffin died last night. She actually lasted longer than I expected, I probably should have culled at the end of last week but I was ill and no-one else here can/will do it. I still really struggle with the ethics of deciding when is the right time to intervene.
That's 3 of the 5 old ladies gone since we moved here 6 months ago. Sorry will stop moping now.

On the plus side, both our lovely pullets are now laying so we're finally getting 2 eggs a day after 5 months with no eggs at all :)
View attachment 4306025
:hugs :hugs :hugs
 

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