After hatching, turkey chicks, known as poults, typically leave the nest within a few hours. They quickly begin to follow their mother, who guides them to food and water. Poults are precocial, meaning they are relatively mature and mobile at hatching, and they start foraging for insects and seeds almost immediately. Additionally, they rely on their mother for warmth and protection from predators in the early stages of life.
According to North Carolina's agricultural department, "Turkey breeders start to lay eggs for hatching at 32 weeks of age. They are artificially inseminated each week during their egg production period which is approximately 25-30 weeks."
I see that the eggs are hatching now. I am hatching an idea about that.
A rafter of turkeys.
Wild turkeys that were introduced, yes, but not naturally occurring turkeys.
turkeys
yes they do!!
The word 'hatching' is a verb
Wild turkeys do not weigh more than domestic turkeys on average. Wild turkeys move around a lot looking for food, domestic turkeys don't have to, causing them to get heavier.
They call it "hindi"
No there are not turkeys in turkey
Turkeys are called turkeys because the Turks, a Muslim group, discovered them
A bunch of turkeys is called a flock of turkeys. It's also called a rafter of turkeys.