training chickens for voluntary flight

ok but where do u get them and will worm work too
droolin.gif
 
ok but where do u get them and will worm work too
droolin.gif
Most cost effective location for mealworms for me is old oat grainery under boards. For short term go to your local pet store or wildlife store. You will see they are pricey. They go a along way and keep well in refrigerator. If they suit your needs, then culturing them yourself can be way to go.


First simply see how they work as an enticement. Will cost about $7 for 500 mealworms. They are not an economical means to raise poultry.
 
One day, my brahma cockerel, who weighs over 7lbs and is only 6 mo old, hunkered down and leaped into the air, flapping furiously with all his might...He got about 4 1/2' in the air! XD I guess his flight feathers haven't fully come in yet :)
 

Very excellent science, centrarchid, love it! And a few great laughs, too! Someone said something about older birds not flying anymore... I know this to not be true, at least in my flock. Also with the egg laying thing... My best flier, Hedwig, finally started laying and, although she is just getting started, hasn't slowed down in the flight department at all yet. I have noticed that some will fly for fun (i know there's no food left in the coop but i feel like going back in anyway! Says ginormous BA roo) while others just can't be bothered. I don't recall seeing all these varied personalities when I had chickens growing up but seeing it now that I have them again is just so fascinating!
 
Very excellent science, centrarchid, love it! And a few great laughs, too! Someone said something about older birds not flying anymore... I know this to not be true, at least in my flock. Also with the egg laying thing... My best flier, Hedwig, finally started laying and, although she is just getting started, hasn't slowed down in the flight department at all yet. I have noticed that some will fly for fun (i know there's no food left in the coop but i feel like going back in anyway! Says ginormous BA roo) while others just can't be bothered. I don't recall seeing all these varied personalities when I had chickens growing up but seeing it now that I have them again is just so fascinating!
Maturity causes decrease in flight capacity for production breeds but that is not the case with my American Games until advanced age on the order of 3 or more years. Even so, I have had 5 year old brood cocks that could be startled into flight from a corn field to fly 800 feet horizontally and shoot through a whole in loft of barn 30 feet from ground. The older birds are a little heavier and slightly slower. Flight capacity declines continuously after that. Some older cocks pushing a decade have a hard time making a 10 foot roost in one flight but that is attributable to fighting as much as to age. We have some hens quite a bit older than that which could fly up to upper manger roost just fine but they clearly lost the dainty mobility of their use. Current cohort of elder hens (4 years old now) will be monitored for long-term changes. Bird referred to as Sallies earlier in thread is used as a teaching tool and as such will be spared culling from all but serious health issues so I can periodically provide updates on her abilities. She can still fly the length of two football fields easily except when in lay and immediately after coming off nest with a brood.
 

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