5-6 months old
Baby penguins hatch from eggs that are laid by adult penguins. The eggs are incubated by one or both parents until they hatch. Once hatched, the baby penguins are cared for and fed by their parents until they are old enough to fend for themselves.
Your parents are still responsible for you. if they allow, then yes.
Baby penguins must first molt -- loose their downy feathers, which if wet, would drown the bird because they hold too much water before they can feed themselves. Molting happens about two months after the baby hatches -- depending on the type of penguin and the location, and the molting process takes about three weeks. Then the babies can dive into the open water with their parents and learn how to find food on their own by watching. Since penguins live in groups, it's fair to say that baby penguins always learn from adult penguins, even when the adult might not be their mum or papa.
10 to 12 weeks
If you're in the US, the age is 18, which is the age at which you become a legal adult. Having a baby doesn't change that.
well, it depends, if they just go im to old to live with my parents anymore, so it leaves. but if it goes no i want to stay then the mother has to leave it it might give it a huge lump of fish, they leave
Not without her parents' permission. Even though she has a child, until she is 18, they are responsible for her.
Without their permission she will have to wait until she turns 18 in Texas. The parents are still responsible for them.
Penguins are covered in feathers, not fur. Penguins molt once each year. During this time, the birds lose all of their feathers.
When the chicks are six to seven months old the parents stop feeding them.
Penguins stay with there mother from 1day old to 1 year old
Penguins take turns incubating their eggs on their feet, keeping them warm and safe from predators. After hatching, both parents share the responsibility of feeding and caring for the chick, regurgitating food to nourish them until they are ready to fend for themselves. Young penguins stay close to their parents for protection and guidance until they are old enough to survive on their own.