I saw some Privett Hatchery Silkie chicks that my local feed store orders from (our feed store has been ordering hatchery stock as well as juveniles from local breeders for over 10 years). The couple chicks I saw from Privett had vaulted skulls so guess it depends on the hatchery. And yeah, skulls on Silkies are delicate - vaulted or not IMO - which is why you may see them stooping or ducking their heads out of the way a lot. At least my two behave that way moreso than our 2 LF do. One wrong thump on the skull of a Silkie can either disable or kill it. Read somewhere that the skull bones don't quiet grow to meet each other completely - something like the soft spot on a human baby's skull.thank you for the info on vaulted vs non vaulted.![]()
another question, my first batch of silkies will be hatching this next wednesdayI have 18 viable right now so have high hopes... however would like to get another group of eggs to incubate in a week or so.... how hard would it be to have to introduce a new batch of chicks to my chicks who will then be 4 weeks old? I am thinking would have to wait a little bit until the newbies are a week or more? anyhow, really wanted to hatch some more, but nervous of introducing everyone (I am totally counting my chicks before they hatch here... but wanted to know prior to ordering more eggs...)
thank you for any input!!!![]()
Use the usual quarantine parameters before introducing newbies & have a fence between them when introducing newbies so the older & newer chicks get used to each other. When the fence/wire barrier is removed they'll hardly notice it's not there any more. Of course, no matter how well chickens know each other, there's always a pecking order they have to establish. My 2 girls went into a broody knock-down drag-out fight last week w/ one losing a couple head feathers but now they're best buds again. Just something you have to let them go through as long as there isn't major injury going on.