Certainly not an emergency, and I don't think there's anything to be done about it, but I thought this forum might be the best place to get some opinions.
I have a chick, currently 4 weeks old, that has been smaller than his hatch mates from the beginning. Initially didn't think much of it, he was noticeably smaller but not so much so that I was concerned. In fact, looking back at pictures taken at the time I'm not entirely certain which one he is.
At 2.5 weeks I noticed he was significantly less feathered than the other chicks. And that the tips of his wings angled up.
vs
Yesterday I noticed that his legs seem to angle outward as well.
I'd appreciate any thoughts anyone has about what's going on here. Is this something that's more likely to be caused by genetics, or parental nutrition, or incubation conditions? The legs seemed normal up until I noticed he's stance yesterday. Malines are big birds, the 9 week old cockerels I have are already as big as my 19 week old Easter egger pullets! My concern is that those legs aren't going to be able to support him long enough to be butchering size.
I have a chick, currently 4 weeks old, that has been smaller than his hatch mates from the beginning. Initially didn't think much of it, he was noticeably smaller but not so much so that I was concerned. In fact, looking back at pictures taken at the time I'm not entirely certain which one he is.
At 2.5 weeks I noticed he was significantly less feathered than the other chicks. And that the tips of his wings angled up.
Yesterday I noticed that his legs seem to angle outward as well.
I'd appreciate any thoughts anyone has about what's going on here. Is this something that's more likely to be caused by genetics, or parental nutrition, or incubation conditions? The legs seemed normal up until I noticed he's stance yesterday. Malines are big birds, the 9 week old cockerels I have are already as big as my 19 week old Easter egger pullets! My concern is that those legs aren't going to be able to support him long enough to be butchering size.