It has been an exciting two weeks at the GEE Funny
Farm. We’ve had three of our emu eggs
hatch. The first one was a surprise just
because though we have had eggs in the past none have hatched. On February 27, there was a flurry of
activity as Kathy read up on what to do with newly hatched emu chicks. We were surprised that the little guy seemed
so weak. He could barely hold his head
up and it took three days before he could walk.
How could a emu chick in the wild survive?!?!
The first chick, still in the incubator.... |
Hatching from its egg... |
So cute baby emu! |
While the Internet can be a wonderful source of information,
it can also be an instrument of frustration.
There are several emu farmers (people who raise emus for their meat and
oil) and like every other farmer, probably, each one has an opinion. I am also in a ‘group’ of emu people and they
are mostly farmers, too, with little understanding for people who raise emus as
pets. Needless to say, it was tough to
get information that gelled with all parties.
As our very cute first chick got a bit older, he did not eat
on his own – it seemed, from what I read, that emu chicks like chicken chicks
would start pecking at things and just had to be guided to food. I ended up hand feeding him with a eye
dropper. He also seemed to have less and
less control of his legs, with them splaying in opposite directions – and walking
seemed an impossible feat. However, he
is a stoic little guy and is finally eating on his own, though I still
encourage water drinking since I don’t actually see him do that on his own.
Our next emu chick hatched on March 9. Upon hatching, we noticed that it was
considerably bigger than our first chick AND he could support its head
immediately and could walk soon after hatching.
An aha moment as we realized that our first chick was not really ‘normal.’ The 2nd chick ate greedily by the
3rd day and we breathed a sigh of relief that he would not have to
be handfed.
Our 2nd emu chick walking, a little. It is exciting to see it go!
Our 3rd chick hatched on March 12 and it, too,
was huge compared to our first guy (who really didn’t seem small when he
hatched). The 3rd chick could
support its head, but seemed very tired – he did take 8 hours to hatch and it
was an exhausting process. This is the 2nd day since it
hatched and it seems to be somewhere in between the other two: stronger than the first and not as strong as
the second.
While we try to educate others about our animals, we find
that we are always learning, too.
Sometimes it is exciting – having emu chicks. Sometimes it is sad – our first chick isn’t
as healthy as we’d like. But that is
life on the farm. With chickens, only
about ¼ of the chicks survive the first 4 days.
We’ve done better than those odds.
We hope and pray for a miracle with our first little guy. We hope and pray that the other two, and any
that we may have in the future, will be healthy. We are grateful for this very cool
experience!!
This is what greeted us at 6:30 am on March 12.
You can see it finally free itself from its egg on the GEE Funny Farm Facebook page!