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- #11
Thank you!can you send me the names of those text books on how to teach a chick not to eat pine shavings, and the one on how to teach them what to eat and what not to eat? Should I read it aloud to them, or can they read it themselves?
LOL at y'all, 'teach them what not to eat'......it's easy, put them in a brooder and don't give them anything they're not supposed to eat. Once they're grown and you put them out, guess what, a chicken will eat what appeals to it's eyes, whether it's good for them or not. what do you do, smack them on the beak if they start toward that box of rat poison? There is no teaching a chicken what they're not supposed to eat......
OP, invest in a brooder, a heat lamp, a feed tray and a nipple type watering system. Chick feed, some chick grit. Probiotics and/or electrolytes in the water. Keep them around 95* the first week, 90* the second week, 85* the third week, 75* week four. Watch them though, not everything is by the book. The chicks actions will tell you if they're too hot or cold, all piled up and chirping a lot, too cold! panting and listless, too hot! Give them one area of the brooder with the heat lamp, and plenty of room to move away from it if they want to. They'll come back to the heat if they get too cool...... After that they are pretty close to fully feathered and pretty much able to fluff their feathers up and keep themselves warm.