Morgan
Hatchling
Hello! I am so glad to have found this forum - I have learned a lot about linnie genetics from Eddie’s Aviary website and think very highly of your careful breeding practices.
My linnie pair have their first clutch, and my hen, Lottie, has laid eight eggs! I am not sure how remarkable this really is but I was pretty surprised. She is almost a year and a half old, has a ton of calcium options - high potency pellets, calcium with iodine mineral block, mineralized oyster shell grit, sesame seeds and high calcium veggies (among other fresh foods) and I have chelated liquid calcium on hand at all times for all my birds (I also have eight budgies), but she is done laying now. The first egg is due to hatch by the 10th or 11th.
I recently heard that linnie parents, or specifically the mom, can become easily stressed and turn aggressively on their own chicks. I was told to just leave them alone completely and not try to coparent or hand raise them at all, unless I want to pull them all at three weeks to hand feed - but that it is also not necessary to hand feed linnies to help them become “tame”.
With budgies I know that handling them often from a young age (as long as mom is comfortable enough herself to allow it) helps them immensely to become familiar with humans and hands, and hand-feeding them helps them to better accept humans as part of their flock. But linnies are of course a different creature. Lottie was closely bonded with me before I bought her partner, Happy, and they are both still very sweet with me up to this point. I sometimes pop a nutriberry into the nest box for Lottie to snack on and she doesn’t open her beak at me or seem stressed by my presence so far.
My main concern is being able to simply check on the chick’s growth once they hatch, make sure they are being fed properly, aren’t developing splayed legs or getting too much air in the crop, and being able to clean the box if necessary so they don’t get poop stuck to their feet. I am not expecting all eight to hatch, but if they did, that would probably be pretty stressful itself for a first time mom. I think the box is plenty big enough at least (9L/7W/8H) - I make them myself out of thin sheets of solid wood because I don’t like that plywood is held together by many layers of toxic glue.
So what is the best practice to follow once the babies hatch? I am adding more bedding to the box today so I won’t have to bother Lottie once the first egg hatches if that is best, but can I open the door to check on them at all once they begin hatching? If I want to hand feed them should I just leave them alone entirely until three weeks of age to pull them? I don’t generally like this practice of taking the babies away from mom entirely, unless mom is rejecting or harming her chicks - I would prefer to coparent. But I only just heard of this complication, so now I am a bit nervous.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated!
My linnie pair have their first clutch, and my hen, Lottie, has laid eight eggs! I am not sure how remarkable this really is but I was pretty surprised. She is almost a year and a half old, has a ton of calcium options - high potency pellets, calcium with iodine mineral block, mineralized oyster shell grit, sesame seeds and high calcium veggies (among other fresh foods) and I have chelated liquid calcium on hand at all times for all my birds (I also have eight budgies), but she is done laying now. The first egg is due to hatch by the 10th or 11th.
I recently heard that linnie parents, or specifically the mom, can become easily stressed and turn aggressively on their own chicks. I was told to just leave them alone completely and not try to coparent or hand raise them at all, unless I want to pull them all at three weeks to hand feed - but that it is also not necessary to hand feed linnies to help them become “tame”.
With budgies I know that handling them often from a young age (as long as mom is comfortable enough herself to allow it) helps them immensely to become familiar with humans and hands, and hand-feeding them helps them to better accept humans as part of their flock. But linnies are of course a different creature. Lottie was closely bonded with me before I bought her partner, Happy, and they are both still very sweet with me up to this point. I sometimes pop a nutriberry into the nest box for Lottie to snack on and she doesn’t open her beak at me or seem stressed by my presence so far.
My main concern is being able to simply check on the chick’s growth once they hatch, make sure they are being fed properly, aren’t developing splayed legs or getting too much air in the crop, and being able to clean the box if necessary so they don’t get poop stuck to their feet. I am not expecting all eight to hatch, but if they did, that would probably be pretty stressful itself for a first time mom. I think the box is plenty big enough at least (9L/7W/8H) - I make them myself out of thin sheets of solid wood because I don’t like that plywood is held together by many layers of toxic glue.
So what is the best practice to follow once the babies hatch? I am adding more bedding to the box today so I won’t have to bother Lottie once the first egg hatches if that is best, but can I open the door to check on them at all once they begin hatching? If I want to hand feed them should I just leave them alone entirely until three weeks of age to pull them? I don’t generally like this practice of taking the babies away from mom entirely, unless mom is rejecting or harming her chicks - I would prefer to coparent. But I only just heard of this complication, so now I am a bit nervous.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated!
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