We have a nice farm store, locally, that got in a shipment of silkies on Tuesday, but didn't release them until yesterday because they were all doing so poorly. My husband and I went to have a look at them, and the ones that I saw looked okay, but there were only a handful, literally. The owner said that he had waited to release them for sale, because the survival rate was so low, and that he thought that these few would live. I didn't ask him which hatchery he got them from, but am sure it was one of the well-known outlets, and am fairly sure that it was solely a bantam order.
My question is, having only had chickens as an adult for almost a year, have chicks always shipped this early in the winter/spring? I know that locally, chicks in most stores are not available until March, or Mid-March. Is the earlier shipment and general availability of chicks due to consumer demand and the backyard chicken movement, or is this the way it has always been? I am one of those who wants their chicks early, and we are having a mild winter, though I know it is terrible in the midwest, and on the east coast. My logic is that if I get my chicks early, they will be at POL by the time my current pullets are in molt.
I'm just curious, as I have read a number of accounts here regarding significant loss of chicks shipped.