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I Killed My Unborn Chicks??.......

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How long do they live Gloria? I have a budgie and the first egg she laid she was egg bound, she nearly died but the Vet got it out and she laid the rest no problem. She's about 7 now and has only had one season where she laid eggs - thankfully!

I know all the egg binding and it doesn't surprise me that it happened the first time because the first egg is usually soft and often is a problem. All you need to do is lubricate her and put her under a heat lamp and let her relax. I know way too much about chicken gynecology!:eek:

My problem is my animals live forever. I just got the eggs and found a tiny egg so that my 7 year old bantam is still laying. I think they only live 6-7 years but like my cat who is 23. Sometimes if they are taken care of, they live a long time. I had a cat that lived to 28 years old and my horse is 25 and my vet expects her to live another ten years.
 
had a cat that lived to 28 years old and my horse is 25

They live that long, because they had (and have) love from you, Gloria. Seems to me with this bantam chicks and stuff being going on at your farm, you may have a large potential of Cute Picture Thread material coming our way...
 
Yea, I feel like an idiot! We have 30 chickens and some of them are really stupid! But my hens do sit on the eggs and keep moving them around with their beaks so I guess it's just a genetic behavior. My dumbest chicken was Blondie. She saw a couple inches of water on the bottom of a bucket and fell in and got stuck and drowned. :eek: My son is a disabled vet and he really adores his chickens (has them cremated when they die?) So I can't make jokes about how some of the chickens died but sometimes when he comes in and tells me how one got killed, I have a hard time keeping a straight face and being supportive. Once my horse stepped on one and he was furious with my horse. What was the stupid chicken standing under my horse for? My horse didn't do it on purpose but I apologized profusely and even pretended to chastise my Rosie in front of him telling she must be more careful where she steps.:laugh: What a life! Greeeeen Acres is the place to be! Farm living is the life for me!!!.....
Hugs,
Gloria

Awwww!!!!!! That's SOOO cute about your son, how you protected his feelings by pretending to reprimand the horse! That's so cute. I have noticed myself in somehow similar situations with my husband. His feelings are what are real, serious, and important, even if the situation seems silly or funny.

My husband eats really noisy sometimes, and it annoys me, but he is sensitive about it, too. So I became sensitive about that, and when he ate loud, I went, "Is it good, Sweetie?" And he really WAS sensitive! He answered "yes" in this cute, tender, vulnerable little kid voice!
 
I dated a guy who chewed with his mouth open and his jaw clicked but he was hearing impaired. I should have used that. Secretly, I made fun of my horse because once she accidentally hit a bird when we were galloping and killed it and I joked with friends that she is a bird serial killer and she's out to get them. She's not. She just has big feet.

Hugs,

Gloria

<It is not necessary to quote the post directly above your reply. Thanks, Amethist>
 
This has been quite a learning experience. I feel an embryotic expert. I have been tenacious in doing this. I am so stubborn. The Serama are from Malaysia and are very tiny and very, very difficult to hatch. After several tries of different batches of eggs, I still have not had one live birth of Serama. I did, however, buy a new incubator with egg turner for $$$$$. FINALLY, I showed my son last night and I am sooooo excited. I candled my last batch of 15 eggs and they are 12 days incubated (7 days to go) and those suckers are alive!!! Their skeletons and beaks and feet are seen very clearly when candled in the dark. But the best part is that they were doing flip flops and very active!! I got my stethescope out and heard their little hearts beating!

But this made me so sad this morning. I have learned that incubation for Serama is 19 days but can be as long as 21. Normal chickens are 21 days and they are a piece of cake to hatch because they are not tiny. Well, a guy that sold me eggs threw in three quail eggs just for the heck of it. Well, it was 24 days so I cracked them open. To my terrible shock, one chick was fully developed and started breathing but soon died. I looked it up on the internet and quail incubation was 23-25 days. I didn't know. I read that if you keep dead eggs in your incubator that they can crack and infect your unborn eggs. I felt so awful. It was so tiny. I don't think I can eat chicken any more. This whole experience reminds me of ultrasounds and seeing pictures of developing fetus when I was pregnant. Then I had miscarriage so this little quail really made me sad.

But I will have these tiny, tiny chicks hatching next week. What a way to start the New Year!! To watch all these chicks being born and because they are so special and frail, I will give them electrolytes and special food for the first few days. I have had day old chicks many times so that will be the easy part.
 
Still trying to get over the short life of the little quail chick but I know for a fact that a dead egg will explode and contaminate your incubator. How was I to know that it only takes 21 days for a big chick to hatch and 25-27 days for a tiny quail.

I will even to post videos. It's uplifting. I will have at least two days of watching chicks being born!
 
O Gloria I am so sorry about what happened to your quail chick but you are right, you didn't know. I can see how it would upset you and trigger hurt from the past regarding your own baby.

((((((((GLORIA)))))))

i am so excited to see pics of your new chicks, I truly can't wait to see them!

Good look and I pray that they will stay safe and warm until they are ready to break out of their shells!
 
I have spent hundreds of dollars and many hours reading about incubating these Serama chickens. They are very different from the domestic breeds from Europe. But you what is so totally awesome? They don't make normal chicken sounds. I was sitting in my bedroom and I heard this AAAWWW, AWWWW, AWWW that sounded like the Everglades. I loved it! In the middle of winter to hear the tropics??? I just checked my eggs and they are still moving. Incubation started on the 9th and takes 19 days. Three days to go! I have a little nursery set up for them. Boiled some of our organic eggs but I'm not to feed them until they are two days old but I will feed them the yolks and special baby electrolytes. I am getting all these invitations from friends to go out on New Year's Eve. Go out in a smokey atmosphere with a bunch of drunks when I can see little tiny chicks getting born?? I will post pictures and if I can figure out how to upload a video, I will share the chick coming out of the shell.

I am so afraid that I will have failed again and the chicks will die. Then the next problem will be if they don't die, what am I going to do with all these chicks?? Apparently, they are in high demand and worth money but I will want to keep them to see which are the most colorful and best prospects for showing. They really are gorgeous tiny little birds.
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I have become obscessed with trying to hatch these tiny Serama eggs. I bought a new incubator and I have had too many eggs that were either not fertilized or something went wrong. I do feel terrible about making mistakes but it is very complicated. It's not anything like hatching regular eggs which I did successfully without any problem. Well, now I understand why one of the really tiny and colorful roosters can sell for almost $1,500. The tiny (A category) hens have eggs so small that none of the eggs produce chicks so they breed true and (B category which is a little larger) will sometimes lay A eggs. I'm being an embryologist and a genetic expert. Genetics have always fascinated me. I don't have blue eyes but my parents and every in the family does. Wait a minute? I keep hoping that I'm not related to these people so why am I looking for genetic answers?
 
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