(no subject)
Sep. 5th, 2012 04:47 pmMy friend Linda, who is a fellow wildlife rehabber, wildlife biologist, and just a great person period, called me the other day about a turkey baby she was raising. She said she didn't think he's a wild turkey, as he's extremely friendly and hardier than wild turkey babies generally are. Someone's cat brought him in and he was in terrible shape when she got him. Well, now he's recovered, and she wanted help IDing him.
She brought him over, and when I opened the box, to my surprise I found--a baby chicken!
Now, to be fair, he's a very unusual breed--likely an Asian or Middle-Eastern game bird. These birds are very prehistoric looking, tall, slow-growing, big-boned, and they do look quite a bit like turkeys. I don't think most people would realize he's a chicken. It gave us both a good laugh, though.
Now our wildlife group has gotten chickens in that were allegedly hawks, pheasants, turkeys, and quail, and those are just in the past few years.
Anyway, I adopted Turk the not-turkey, and I'm trying to get Butterscotch, the mother serama in the house, to accept him. Her chicks are about the same age as Turk, however Turk is larger than even Butterscotch herself, so she thinks he's a threat and keeps going after him. I'm hoping she'll eventually accept him if he stays in with her long enough. Poor Turk thinks he's more of a person than anything else, and when I try to introduce him to chickens, he cowers under me. So much for being fierce, despite how he's going to look when he grows up!
Next up: My thoughts on Chihayafuru!
She brought him over, and when I opened the box, to my surprise I found--a baby chicken!
Now, to be fair, he's a very unusual breed--likely an Asian or Middle-Eastern game bird. These birds are very prehistoric looking, tall, slow-growing, big-boned, and they do look quite a bit like turkeys. I don't think most people would realize he's a chicken. It gave us both a good laugh, though.
Now our wildlife group has gotten chickens in that were allegedly hawks, pheasants, turkeys, and quail, and those are just in the past few years.
Anyway, I adopted Turk the not-turkey, and I'm trying to get Butterscotch, the mother serama in the house, to accept him. Her chicks are about the same age as Turk, however Turk is larger than even Butterscotch herself, so she thinks he's a threat and keeps going after him. I'm hoping she'll eventually accept him if he stays in with her long enough. Poor Turk thinks he's more of a person than anything else, and when I try to introduce him to chickens, he cowers under me. So much for being fierce, despite how he's going to look when he grows up!
Next up: My thoughts on Chihayafuru!