My eggs have hatched

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Discussion

Some Guy

2,113 posts

91 months

Sunday 26th August 2018
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Wiccan of Darkness said:
...as I entered the woods from the west, she exited from the south, ran back in to the corn stubble and did little pirouettes of victory, twirling and chirping with ecstasy having outwitted a clumsy oaf.

Holy fk that bird could run. I swear she was grinning at me as I ushered her back to the bosom of her family.
Are you sure you haven't inadvertently bred roadrunners? smile
"meep meep"


Edited by Some Guy on Sunday 26th August 15:52

silentbrown

8,832 posts

116 months

Sunday 26th August 2018
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Wiccan of Darkness said:
Holy fk that bird could run. I swear she was grinning at me as I ushered her back to the bosom of her family.
Brilliant. Good job they haven't fledged yet... smile

We've got Swallows nesting over the back door that have just hatched their second clutch. Messy sods, though. And the eggs were tiny - about the size of a small hazelnut.

Nightmare

5,187 posts

284 months

Sunday 26th August 2018
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Brilliant Wiccan! Out of interest whereabouts in the UK are you?

I really want Ostriches now

Wiccan of Darkness

Original Poster:

1,839 posts

83 months

Sunday 26th August 2018
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Got a few more pics from yesterday but the camera is still in the car and as it's pissing it down it'll have to be a tomorrow night upload.

They get fed a mix of moo mix (beef nuts) layers pellets and mixed corn. The ratio depends on the time of year and the weather.

No, they're not roadrunners!! Even though they're 3 weeks old, they can run faster than road runners, and for a lot longer. Ostriches aren't speedy birds, although they can run at up to 50mph they hate it, it's destabilising. They'll happily trot at 15-20 mph but they can keep up that steady jog for 20-25 hours, non stop.

That being said, I was suitably impressed by the escapee, although not unexpected.

When Boris was a nipper, one chilly morning I went in to his field, he was up near the gate with his mom and pop and watched me intently as I ambled down to the water trough with a rock pick to break up the ice. Boris never took his eyes off me, and despite him only being 2ft tall, I should have known the gig was up. As soon as the first lump of ice was lifted out of the water trough, I heard a scuffle in the snow behind me and the instantaneous, unmistakable pain of a direct kick to the back of my knees, gifting me a one way ticket to ground level, directly in front of a water trough.

As I extricated myself from the icy swirls, yelping profanities along the lines of "you fking bd of a bird" or words to that effect, Boris had already legged it back to the other end of the field, chirping and twirling with glee at the unfurling woe he had so cruelly and inhumanely inflicted on my person.

Ohhh yes. They have form for this sort of thing.

dmulally

6,193 posts

180 months

Thursday 30th August 2018
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rofl this thread is tops.

Oilchange

8,462 posts

260 months

Thursday 30th August 2018
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Bloody hilarious!

Wiccan of Darkness

Original Poster:

1,839 posts

83 months

Friday 31st August 2018
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Well.... we're coming in to week 4 and whilst showing their photogenic side..




They're also lulling me in to a false sense of security for a well defined snap and displaying their utter, utter contempt...



A very well-timed st.

Yeah. I see the way you're looking at me, you fluffy, adorable leggy bd.

I'll try and pop a few more pics up over the weekend. One is growing at a phenomenal rate (the female that escaped), one is adopting the role of middle manager and trying not to be noticed by being mr or mrs average (I don't know which as when I lifted his/her tail for a peek, it took one look at me and decided my intentions were less than proper and legged it) and the smallest one is a male.

I'm hoping the small one will realise it needs to scoff down copious quantities of egg shell for rapid bone growth.

Nightmare

5,187 posts

284 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
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I’m laying my fiver on it being 1 female and 2 males smile

That really is an amazing size difference between them. Hope she doesn’t get too peckish and gobble up the teeny one!

dudleybloke

19,821 posts

186 months

Tuesday 18th September 2018
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How are they now?
I bet they are growing rapidly.

RemyMartin81D

6,759 posts

205 months

Saturday 29th September 2018
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How did I miss this thread. Very awesome and they are so cute when small.

I do love Ostriches, they really are fking hard as nails and dangerous creatures in their own right. Almost ashamed of myself that I ate one once back when I was a meat eater! Sorry. Tasted ok though iirc.

Hope yours are ok!

Wiccan of Darkness

Original Poster:

1,839 posts

83 months

Tuesday 9th October 2018
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Not been around for a while, so apologies for anyone following the thread.

I've been feeding them broken eggshell at a rate of knots and they chow down on that stuff with relish. Helps the bones to grow.



This was mid september, with the bucket in view to give a sense of scale. I then dished out excess egg shell. The one munched merrily, the two smaller ones not as much.

The large one is indeed female, the other 2 are both males. I managed to peek up their bumholes.



Sat in the field, their growth isn't as pronounced, but back in the shed where I can happily snap away when they're eating, the last few weeks has shown a difference in growth rates



2 weeks ago



This was last week. The female is growing like a weed, the 2 smaller males are growing, but not as fast. To me, I am wondering whether they're growing at all, people say they are but seeing them daily, compared to how quick the female is growing, I have my doubts.

Anyway the chicks are now on a really expensive Dodson and Horrell food for growing ostrich chicks which is a waste of money imho as I can formulate my own food for a third of the price.


Out in the field, they still look quite small.

Today, all three were at the very least a neck length higher than the bucket. The larger one now has legs the height of the bucket.

They've come a long way from this...


I've got a buyer lined up for one of the males as a breeder bird. Chicks that hatch naturally, in a nest, grow bigger and mature faster than ones incubated artificially. Back in the 1990's breeders realised they could get a 90% success rate using incubators, compared with a 10% rate 'naturally'. They then sold those birds at 3 years of age as breeder birds, typically for £30,000 a trio to "investors". Unfortunately, those birds never did well at breeding and consequently, the promises of massive riches bore no fruit.

On the other hand, naturally hatched birds are awesome.

dmulally

6,193 posts

180 months

Tuesday 9th October 2018
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Great update, thanks.

The wild ducklings I have in my pond that I am trying to protect seem pretty lame and I'm going to tell them as much later on today.

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 10th October 2018
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What a great thread.


Wiccan of Darkness

Original Poster:

1,839 posts

83 months

Friday 2nd November 2018
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I keep meaning to update the thread, and had dozens of wonderful pics stashed on the camera, a few more of those in a bit.

Today was not a good day.

On wednesday afternoon, only two of the chicks came running in for food. The third was lying in a crumpled heap in the field. Boris was agitated, and it's never a good sign. One of the smaller male chicks was flailing around, having dislocated his left hock joint.

Ostrich chicks do often suffer with luxating hock joints, the answer is to strap up both legs and hope they behave, and grow out of it. This one chick had been limping a lot a few weeks back, and had grown out of it. A quick massage of the joint, and flex it by holding the bird upside down until you feel the joint pop back in, and job jobbed.

Bird trotted off, happy as a pig in st.

10 minutes later, out it popped again. Required further attention, so took chick off to the vets for some dog strength metacam and some stronger bandages, then off home. Bird stayed the night in my hallway. There's some pics floating around but unavailable right now.

Yesterday afternoon, he went back to the field. The other birds were not impressed, objected strongly to his presence and kicked him over, dislocating the other hock. Sadly, this is terminal. I bandaged and splinted the other leg, and confined him to a crate but he thrashed around in the crate, splitting his hock open.

He went back to the vets and was euthanised.



Farewell, little fella. I wish I had done more.

Needless to say, I feel pretty st today and I've been crabby as hell. Even though they're not "pets", I've developed a strong bond with them in the 12 weeks they've been alive, and seen each chick develop its own personality. This one was sweet, and mild (the other male is a tad boisterous).

Just to point out how "terminal" a compound dislocation of the hock joint is, there's a pic behind the spoiler.






<edit> I removed the spoiler. Some times, the grim reality of times like this whilst not being inappropriately glorified, shouldn't be sanitised. In the past when other chicks have suffered identical injuries, I've been faced with the somewhat objectionable comments from the holier-than-thou brigade who can't understand why 'more couldn't be done'. Well, from the pic, it's obvious why it's terminal, and why despite how much of an utter, utter I feel about it, euthanasia was the correct option.

garythesign

2,089 posts

88 months

Saturday 3rd November 2018
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Thanks for updating this thread. It has been fascinating reading.

Sorry to hear about you having to euthanise one of the chicks.

Nature’s pretty harsh

threadlock

3,196 posts

254 months

Wednesday 7th November 2018
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frown

Thanks for the update though. All very interesting.

Wiccan of Darkness

Original Poster:

1,839 posts

83 months

Thursday 3rd September 2020
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Well, its been nearly 2 years, so to update on the 2 survivors. I named them Saffron and Basil.

They grew. And grew.

This is Saffron, growing fast.

Saffron on the left, Basil on the right.

4 months of age.

Bit of an action shot. By now, Saffron was the clear dominant one (she's the one who escaped down the runway so the microlights couldn't land. Bless her) Basil was quite subordinate and remains so to this day.

So why the update now?

Well the sods have gone and done it again...



The start of the year wasn't good, climate wise (probably for another thread but relevant) we had no proper spring, it went from late winter to early summer. This meant they started nesting way too early and were sitting in early may. Eggs laid this early don't develop, and by late june they had sifted through the eggs and one by one, rejected them.

A second clutch was laid, this time a bit late, meaning if they did hatch, it wouldn't be at least till the start of september.

Lo and behold, on the 1st....

Welcome to the world, little chap.

A second arrived today, so more pics to follow. Sadly, this first one was attacked by Basil. I don't know why, but right now it's currently being hand reared. Basil was moved to the other side so is no longer in contact. Oh and Basil laid an egg, so that's a female too. Saffron has been more interested in the nest, so hoping for more.

The last post shows that its not all fluffykins, unicorns and rainbows. There's another 4 eggs due to hatch, whether we get any live chicks or not remains to be seen. Hopefully they hatch, hopefully they survive and I can eek this thread out another 2 pages...

AshVX220

5,929 posts

190 months

Tuesday 8th September 2020
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How have I missed this thread it's fantastic! So cool.

When I lived in Florida we had Sandhill Cranes all over the community I lived in, they mate for life and every year each pair would have one or two chicks, which were just ginger balls of fluff on legs, very cute! Much like your Ostriches.