Chicks in the House

For Ivy’s birthday this year she was given an incubator and a dozen hatching eggs.

For three weeks we turned eggs multiple times a day and managed not to knock the incubator to the floor nor throw or drop eggs when Clara crawled up to “help.”

The day we came back from Michigan the chicks had started hatching and by Monday morning Ivy was the proud parent to six baby chicks.

When Ivy first got the eggs we asked her where she was going to keep them when they hatched. Her answer was the were going to stay in a box in her room with her real toys so she could play with them.

I laughed. That would be ridiculous.

The baby chicks lived in the house for three weeks.

So much for the laughter.

At first Ivy was very concerned about monitoring them:

“Mom, you watch my baby chicks for me, don’t let them die.  I’ll be right back.”

Now, baby chicks are not new to my girls. Clara knows that she’s not allowed to grab them but she hold her cheek out for a “nuzzle” when someone else picks them up. Ivy is good about picking them up with two hands and screaming when her sister tries something inappropriate:

“Mom! Clara threw a Dora chair at the baby chicks! …. Don’t worry it didn’t kill them!”

It turns out the house involves a lot of baby chick hazards. Clara was fond of “giving” them toys to play with – read that as chucking random items on top of them. Ivy just worked on rubbing the feathers off with so much handling and making up with a games to play with them. It should be mentioned that baby chicks don’t really play games. Her first game was she would lure baby chicks over to her fingers and then when they would peck her she would “peck” them back with her hand causing them to fly to the other side of the box. Not a good game.

Then there was the other olfactory hazard of baby chicks in the house. At first it wasn’t so bad. Ivy would open the door to the room they where in and when she smelled the hot wood shavings and baby chicks she’d say in a voice full of excitement:

“Can you smell that? – It’s baby chicks!”

In the last week the smell had changed a bit from fresh shavings and warm chicks to plain old chicken poop.

On the upside we had some very nice nights with our bedroom window open for the fresh air.

Speaking of chicken poop… one of the last days they were in the house it was rest time. Clara was napping, I was laying in bed reading and Ivy was playing with her chicks in my bed room. Then I hear:

“Mom? Did you ever have a baby chick poop on your bed?”

Possibly in a slight, although unwarranted, panic I said “IVY!”

Ivy laughed and responded with:

“I was just kidding there’s no poop!”

A thorough check confirmed that she had indeed been joking, but there was a lot of chicken feed in my bed.

Now the chicks are outside, my house smells better, and there’s no more chicken feed in my bed.

A normal mother would be pleased by these events.

Never having been accused of being normal I’m plotting what we can hatch next!

9 comments on “Chicks in the House

  1. Julie's avatar Julie says:

    Well Jessie I am glad it is your house and not mine but you are indeed giving your girls lots of neat experiences in life. Love your stories, they always put a smile on my face.

  2. Jenny's avatar Jenny says:

    I love this! I can smell the chick smell and then it turning to chicken poop smell. What about the dust it caused? You make me want to collect our eggs from today and put them in the “incuvator”! I think I will wait until next year when Henry is older and just buy chicks this spring! I hope no one suggest hatching eggs to me or I might change my mind.

    • Jessie's avatar Jessie says:

      Dust? Dust? I worry about chunks of dirt and gobs of dog hair, if they made dust I didn’t notice it!

      Speaking of which I discovered yesterday that if I don’t sweep my floor and then do push ups it’s a really good motivator, don’t want to lay on that floor!!!

  3. Cara's avatar Cara says:

    What a great experience for the kids and kudos to you for doing. I narrowly escaped having a kiddie pool full of chicks in my basement last spring when Jon was on his “we should have chickens” kick. I really dont like the smell and I am confident Tynan would have “loved” them to death since he has his fathers sense of gentleness (when a friendly sock in the arm almost knocks a kid over it was probably too hard). I think the year full of accumulating equines has made him forget about poultry for a while.

  4. Corky's avatar Corky says:

    Yes, incubators are great for kids….Johnny once hatched 85 pheasant eggs….has hatched many duck and goose eggs, and even tried to hatch an emu egg once. I think Ivy needs an emu egg….

  5. Vlasty's avatar Vlasty says:

    What a fun experience to read about! Reminds me of the times my mom had an incubator on the kitchen table in her Colby apartment. She was in her 70’s and 80’s then and continued to hatch pheasant eggs, carefully monitoring conditions. We always wondered what her neighbors thought. Then I was reminded of taking a hatch of ducklings into my one car (in town garage) garage because they were too big for her table top.

    Thanks for sparking some fond memories with your story!

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