That chick is called a naked neck or turken. It will stay naked, and is a very unique looking chicken.
Yes you can. You may get some pecking and fighting if the ages are vastly different. Weaker birds (younger) will be subjected to "the pecking order" and bossed around by the older stronger ones but this can happen with chicks hatched from the same clutch if some hatch out a day or two after the first batch.
Not really if given to a youngster, it will end up crushed, it will die lack of water feed , get cold die ect .if not they will lose intrest after a while . i once seen a kid have a chick for about 5 min then it was doomed .iv'e had numorous people give me chicks because they were given these chicks for Easter next day now what.
After 24 hours the chicks have dried and become the fluffy bundles of activity we all know and love. Healthy day old chicks should be moving around, making lots of noise and interacting with its flock mates.
So it is time to take your baby chicks that you have been brooding for about 5 weeks to the chicken pen. First make sure the chicks are all feathered out, make sure that the temperature does not fall below 70 degrees and if it does make sure you still have heat lamps set up. The cold temperatures at night can be the biggest problem as the chicks will naturally huddle for warmth the ones on the bottom of the pile will suffocate.
They could be stepped on
Chicks walk around until they get there feathers.
There is no such thing as a "Miniature" chicken. However, if you are referring to bantam chickens, they can be bought at hatcheries and from private sellers.
sheynne bright from the 216 chicks :) i recently seen them together
There has to be a rooster around to get any chicks out of the eggs.
If you mean whole baby chicks bought from a reptile supplier - they will be perfectly safe.
In the sentence, "The baby chicks are running around.", the plural noun is chicks.There are no proper nouns, there are no possessive nouns.Placing an apostrophe after the noun chicks does not make it a possessive noun. A possessive noun must 'posses' another word in the sentence; for example:"The baby chicks' mother is running around."A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; for example:"The baby chicks' mother Penny is running around.
A verb phrase may be followed by a direct or indirect object, an adverb, a prepositional phrase, or a complement. These elements provide additional information about the action expressed by the verb.
A brood is a group of animals hatched from one set of eggs. The brood of chicks followed their mother around the farmyard.
Yes you can. You may get some pecking and fighting if the ages are vastly different. Weaker birds (younger) will be subjected to "the pecking order" and bossed around by the older stronger ones but this can happen with chicks hatched from the same clutch if some hatch out a day or two after the first batch.
I don't think I have ever had that problem but it sounds like the mother is trying to kill the chicks! If so, there must be a reason. Mothers purposely kill chicks if there is a problem, (ie, the chicks are not hers, the chick is unhealthy/ill/dying/in pain). If she is just pecking she might be telling them off or telling them who's boss. But I'm no chicken expert breeder so I wouldn't know.
8 roosters, 11 hens, 81 chicks
Around 3-4 inches from head to tail.