There are several hatcheries that you can do business with which will mail you your chicks. Basically, what happens is you pick up the phone and call the provider and place your order. You will have to pay for the chickens when your order is placed. Once you have placed your order, the hatchery will give you a ship date and an arrival date. The chickens that we picked up yesterday were ordered from McMurray Hatchery. This is only the second time that we have ordered from them and we were pleased with the results. This order was for Jumbo Cornish X Rocks which my oldest son raises. We just call them 'dinner' here on the farm. And no, these are NOT genitically modified chickens! I have seen many blogs about how these are 'freak' birds of nature. WRONG! These are hybrids and if you don't like hybrids, you better not eat anything that you don't grow yourself because organic vegetables are often hybrids. That topic will be saved for another post.
The day before your chickens arrive, you should get everything ready. Make sure you have your boxes, newspaper, feeders, FEED, water systems, heat lamps and working bulbs.
The day the chickens arrive, expect a call from your post office around 6 am requesting that you pick your birds up. I suppose you could ask the carrier to delivery them, but I would never do that as the mortality rate would sky rocket!
When you get to the post office, there will be a bell to ring that lets the people in the back know that you are there to pick up your birds. They are always happy when you come and get the birds in a timely fashion.
This box contains about 100 birds. Yes, the Post Office is where you pick your birds up! |
Here is a box that we use for the first two days. |
We loaded our birds into the box, four at a time. My two oldest boys moved the birds while I did the tally marks. In the end, we had 83 birds of which some were male red stars. They added extra of those birds to keep our original order of birds warm.
As you put the birds in the box, you want to dip their beak in the honey water to help them learn how to drink and to give them energy. Notice that we have marbles in the bottom of the water container. If you don't put marbles or rocks in there, the baby birds WILL get in the water...they WILL get all wet...and they WILL die if you don't find the problem in time! So put marbles or rocks in the water to PREVENT this problem from occurring.
Dip the beak in the water to help them learn how to drink. |
Once you have taught the birds how to drink, they will do just fine.
Drinking on their own. |
Home mixed feed for the baby chicks. |
Here are the chickens in the box after 24 hours. They are doing well. We now have water with the vitamin in the water container. We need to freshen the newspaper. We have lots of food choices and heat options for them and they are happy as can be.
The birds can get out of the heat or get closer to the heat as they need. |
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