So far, not the best experience...

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In my opinion, it depends if you want pets or backyard egg layers.

If you just want egg layers and aren't planning to spend much time with the birds after they're moved to the tractor, don't change what you are doing. If you want pets, an animal you wouldn't be afraid to have near your family members, you're going to have to treat them like pets...

We have 4 Wyandotte pullets in our flock, 1 White, 1 Columbian, 1 Silver Laced and 1 Golden Laced. They are 9 months old and some of the gentlest birds in our flock. Our flock has been raised as pets, held and petted since we got them as day-old chicks. They follow us around the farm yard and eat treats out of our hands. If we sit on the barn stool, they jump on our laps and chat and sometimes fall asleep. They talk to us when we call them by name and sometimes come when they are called.

They are excellent egg layers and none of them ever peck when you remove an egg from under them. The Gold and Silver Laced lay 5-6 eggs a week and the White and Columbian lay 4-5 a week.

I found that if you are calm with your chicks, they'll be calm too. Try handling each chick at least half an hour a day. Hold it. Pet it. Talk to it. Give each a little bit of feed from your hand. Just like any animal, a chick can tell if you are stressed or not happy about being near it.

If all you are doing is picking up a bird and moving it to another box, they won't get used to you. They will associate you with stress. Once you pick them up, do a quick check for pasty butt, see if their eyes are clear and shiny, and that they have no injuries. Check under their wings and around their vent area for bugs. You shouldn't have too many problems at this age. But if you start looking at them when they are this young, it will be much easier when they are full grown because they will be used to you looking. This will be invaluable if any of them gets sick or injured. They won't struggle as much.

I saw the example of this when a friend's bird got injured. She didn't spend much time with her chicks and now they are about a year old. She had to treat the injured bird but it was so panicked about being held, she asked me to hold it still so she could see where it was injured and how badly. I have never had any problems picking or holding my birds for any reason.

Yes, chicks eat, drink, sleep, peep and poop. That's what they do. You could compare a baby chick to a newborn child (except you probably diapered the baby).
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At 3 weeks, it is normal for your chicks to start exploring their world and testing their wings. If you don't have tall walls around the brooder area, they will probably make it over the walls. They have a lot of exploring and developing to do before they start laying eggs at about 5 months of age.

As already mentioned, as the chicks grow, you should raise their waterers and feeders to be as high as their backs. This will help keep most scratchings out. Or at least until one of them starts to dust bathe right next to the waterer.
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If you haven't already seen a chick dust bathe, it can be pretty scary. The chick writhes around in the bedding trying to completely cover the body and after done to it's satisfaction, will lie still for a while in a strange position(you might think it's dead). I liken it to a spa treatment, no one wants to move after a great massage.
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Then all of a sudden the chick pops up and shakes itself off, bedding goes flying all over, and the chick is off to some new adventure. If you have room in your brooder area, you can add a small cardboard box with sand in it for your birds to use to dust bathe. If you don't provide one, the birds will make their own.

Another tip for keeping the chicks off the top of the waterer is to make a cone out of heavy-duty cardboard or piece of clean heavy-duty plastic (like a milk or bleach bottle). Attach that to cover the flat top of the waterer.

If you haven't already, you can put some bricks, blocks of wood and some low roosts in the brooder area for your chicks. It really is cute to see them tucked in at night on their roosts.

We didn't give our flock any treats except mashed hard cooked eggs until they were 4 weeks old. Then we started giving them chopped up or grated fruits and veggies occasionally. The treats should never make up the majority of their feed, so that the protein level they get from the feed isn't lowered too much. Once you start giving anything other than their starter/grower feed, you need to supply grit too.

We used a 6' kiddie pool for the brooder and used pine shavings for the bedding. I used a kitty litter scooper (not the cat's) to pick out the poop every night. I did this when I made sure the waterers and feeders were cleaned and filled. We started with 25 chicks and we didn't notice any smell. We kept them in our laundry/mud room and it has large patio doors for ventilation. What we really noticed after we moved the chicks from our laundry/mud room to the barn was the dust they left behind.

Our birds are locked up in the hen house at night, but forage our fenced 2 acres from sun up to sun down during the day. They are fun to watch and you will learn each by their personalities.

It's not too late to start spending more time with them and soon you should notice a difference in their behavior towards you.

Backyard chicken raising really is fun and enjoyable. It is a wonderful way to get rid of stress at the end of a long day at work. Please keep us updated on how you are doing.

Good luck!
regards,
keljonma
 
Silkie, do you mean the bottle that turns upside-down with the ball in it that they push back to get the water? I wondered if that would work in the pet store one day, but I'd never read anything about them. Perhaps I'll try that.

Smoky, I went home at lunch and we bonded!
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I gave them little bits of bread and grape. They're still trying to figure out the grape, I think.
 
keljonma, thanks for taking all that time to reply to me. I do want them to be like pets, and I want to hold them and stuff, but I always give up quickly bc they seem so stressed out. Perhaps I'll just MAKE them like me and keep holding them.
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It is so warm here (80) that I'm about to make them a temporary coop outside... while waiting for our chicken tractor to be built. I'll still keep them inside at night and when I'm not at home, but surely they'd like to spend some time outside.

We did put a roost up in their bin, but they don't really show much interest in it.

I will put some DE out for them to dust bathe in when I put them outside today. I did put some in the bin, but talk about a mess! I didn't think to put a smaller box in there with it like you suggested.

Thanks so much... you guys are giving me hope!
 
shandea,

Your chicks will love it outside! You can try to tempt them back indoors with some small treat. This works well if you call them at the same time. Then they associate going back to you as a good thing. This is REALLY helpful after you put your birds outdoors full-time.

It was 70°F here yesterday but we're supposed to be back into the 20's tonight and 30°F tomorrow.
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Glad to hear things are going better for you. Keep at it! You'll be writing glowing things about your girls before you know what hit you!
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regards,
keljonma
 
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Hi,
I am doing my first set of backyard chicks, now 4-5 weeks old, living in a big wire dog crate in the kitchen.( I am a professional dog trainer and these chickens are smart, I am using classic dog training on them and they are responding well. (fair , firm , consistant, loving))

I just took one of every kind at the feed store, a rhode island red, aracana and a silver wyaddotte.
I made a point of picking them up for 15-30 secs twice a day, from the day they came home, so they became used to handling.
Now I can pick everyone up but the silver wyaddotte, she fusses the most! but I clean the cage every 2 days and I pick her up and put her in the holding box. I make a bit of eye contact and hold her firmly across the wings, I do not want her to learn she can escape my hands, (which she has done).

I am using Good Mews organic, biodegradable cat litter in the dog crate pan, it is working well, one of the feed stores was using it. The house/kitchen does not smell at all.
the food and water are up on chunks of brick.
We have encouraged roosting, so they have a roost and love to climb up and watch us in the kitchen.
can your chickens watch you?
I think that is very important, ours calmed down a lot when we moved them from the tupperware container to the open wire crate, where they can see a lot.
I have three shelites and two cats, and I now have very well sociailzed chickens, they are even ignoring the vacumn cleaner.
My mom has taught them all to jump up on their roost for lettuce and celery, we call chick chick and they are there. Now they know exactly where the celery is in the fridge and are on their roost as I get it out of the bag.
Since I am planning them to be confined for 98% of the time , I am not allowing any free roaming at this age.
the weather should be 60 tomoorrrow , so I will put them in in a dog exercise pen on the grass for one hour of sun and fun.
. They need a bit more space and are acting like young bored preteens, but its is too cold to move them out, and i want to keep them social.

If you don't like your chickens, feel free to try another, friendlier brand, my rhode island red is very tame, the silver is a bit of a bully. She better lay a lot of eggs! Its not too late too start over and have more fun.
I can email pics of my set up if you like
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justine [email protected].
 
Shandea-
I admire you for being so candid!
I was talking with my husband last night and said, "What was I thinking?!?! I could have gotten 6 birds and instead ended up with 23! I'm in over my head!"
He, of course, was very supportive. "You got 'em now! Better learn to deal with it!"
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I just want you to know that you aren't the only one struggling. I just switched to pine shavings this morning and they seem to be much happier chicks. They scratch around, kind of bed down, dust themselves. I am much happier too bc I don't have to changing those smelly aweful towels all the time! Mine do not necessarily like to be handled either. Some are more tolerant than others, but I wouldn't say that any of them necessarily enjoy it. I was giving them boiled egg once a day as treats and then the diarrhea crisis struck, so I have decided not to give them any treats until they are older. It seems to have helped.
I'm with ya, girl. I have questioned what I got myself into as well. You'll be OK. You'll all be happier when they can be outside!

Simple Chick
 
Phew! So glad I'm not the only one. 23??? Guess I shouldn't complain about 4, huh?

Good luck to you...
 
What an amazing community we've got here! Nobody has been judgemental or rude... just a bunch of friendly & helpful people. Incredible!

Lot's of good info here. I'm trying to find a way to condense all this goodness into an article for the BYC site.

My two cents: I once read that if you're holding an animal and let it down when it is scratching / fighting that it only reinforces that behavior: Fighting = getting down.

I hold my chickens carefully so they feel safe and if they are still fighting I don't set them down until they are calm.
 
We've all had that feeling of what was I thinking?
My husband says that we have a farm...I have 2 whole chickens...
My neighbours think I'm insane and that it's gross to have chickens as pets...
My sister and aunt and sister in law are supportive, but I ply them with eggs.
My son likes having them, but doesn't clean, feed or water them...
I clean up the fresh ploop everyday and do a good cleaning every week and a half to two weeks and put down fresh newspapers and clean tarps.
I let it get bad this past few weeks, because I've been busy at work and with my Aunt and all sorts of sundry real life junk.
When I got my first two permanently, they were about a week old. They missed their littermates so I picked them up and held them and they fell asleep on my shoulder. I was a goner.
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:love and I could pick them up all the time.
My second 2 year a few months old and hadn't been "pets", but real chickens so they, especially Obelisk, were rather wild. Slifer, a Brahma finally settled down and was pickup and huggable. Obelisk has her moments of cuddliness, but it's mostly about food.
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My newest member of the family Pennny is a bantam and she's very cuddly and talks alot. She walked right up my arm and onto my shoulder the first time I held her...
 
I was having the same smelly issue with my 13 babies and while at wal-mart i thought i would check out the different types of bedding they had. Well i almost got the pine shavings but i don't really like the wmell they produce either so i opted for this bedding that looks like recycled drink holder from a fast food resturant and to my suprise it has worked really well. I have had the same bedding in the brooder for a week and not only does it not smell at all, the chicks love to scratch around in it and i am really really pleased with it. I don't know if any one else has used this stuff but it is the best i have used. I can get the name of it if you would like just let me know.
 

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