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N.Lavery / UK (Old NTU Newsletter) |
Settling Young Birds |
Date Written / Published: NTU Newsletter |
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Settling Young Birds
(a Brief History)
Settling Young Birds
A lot of information is available to novices advising them how best to
settle youngsters. Generally, the advise given includes a three day period
without food for the youngsters prior to release or waiting until the eye color
changes then starving the birds before letting them out. I followed these
methods exactly for the past few years and I have to say the results were
hopeless. Each year, I lost approximately half of the birds I tried to settle
and last year alone, I only managed to hold 12 out of 30. This year, I decided
to try a different approach and I am pleased to report that out of a total of
22 youngsters, I settled 18. I am certain that the method I used to prepare the
youngsters before release is the main contributory factor to this year's
sizeable reduction in losses. Obviously, there will be those who will say that
luck comes into it as well and I have to agree that this is probably a factor
too. Anyway, what I did is I separated the youngsters from their
parents at 28 days old and placed them in a pen with an old fantail hen. They
were fed daily on good mixture and as much water as they wanted for 7 days --
each day I put them in the flight cage for a few hours before feeding with a
number of droppers outside chasing around. On the second week, I changed their
diet to 2/3 barley and 1/3 wheat mixture which I fed them in the evening and
which was removed after they had taken a drink. By this time, they had learned
to enter the loft through a trap which on my loft is an integral part of the
flight cage. After 4 days on this regime, I cut their rations by half for 2
days and on the seventh day, I decided to let them out. First, I allowed one
youngster to follow the droppers onto the loft top to join the rest of the
droppers and often it had struck up and landed a number of times. I allowed
another to join it. eventually, I had 3 youngsters chasing around on the loft
top after seeds with the droppers and occasionally striking up together and
landing. I carried on with this procedure until I had settled 6 youngsters and
these I flew as a kit. Out of a total of 22 youngsters, I settled 18 and of the
remaining 4 - I lost 2 when they had reached the 2-3 hours flying stage and the
other 2 were lost directly off the loft top. Obviously, when you are dealing
with young tipplers (unpredictable at the best of times) no system can be
deemed foolproof, but I feel nonetheless, that starving the youngsters as in
the 'breaking down' method is unnecessary as everyone knows, despite their
hunger they are still very much liable to strike up and disappear. N.Lavery / UK (Old NTU Newsletter)
Date Written / Published: NTU Newsletter