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07-08-03, 06:08 PM
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#1
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2002
Location: Toronto
Age: 42
Posts: 1,405
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Chicks, beneficial?
Just wondering how everyone feels about chicks, day old and up as food sources. Being that their price is considerably less, I wonder if they are as beneficial as rodents. If anyone has any info that would be great. I feed many large varanids, and pythons. They all eagerly take chicks and rodents. The varanids seem even more responsive to chicks.
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07-08-03, 06:14 PM
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#2
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Guest
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I feed chicks(or chickens) on occasion, my landlord raises them and gives me the dead. I've never had any negative results, but thats a big difference from chicks being a main diet over time. My objection is the snakes defication afterward, what a stink lol.
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07-08-03, 06:41 PM
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#3
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2002
Location: Toronto
Age: 42
Posts: 1,405
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Ive had people tell me that SAME thing. However, i still can't smell my reptiles crap, at one point I could, but now.. Nothing. Even when my 25 lb albig poops, i can't smell it.. haha thanks for your input rev, appreciated.
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07-08-03, 08:23 PM
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#4
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Former Moderator no longer active
Join Date: Feb-2002
Location: Christchurch
Posts: 10,251
Country:
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I wouldn't exactly say they are beneficial to snakes. My monitor experience is very limited so I won't comment on that, but I have also noticed they seem to prefer chicks to rats and the like. I recall a while ago, I wish I knew where it was, a discussion about a correlation between ERS and feeding chicks. In addition, anything that causes such gross feces indicates something to do with improper digestion as well...
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07-08-03, 08:33 PM
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#5
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2002
Location: Toronto
Age: 42
Posts: 1,405
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Its funny everyone comments on the digestion, i really have yet to see any problems from chicks... Fish is a different story however. Thanks Linds.
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07-08-03, 11:37 PM
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#6
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Member
Join Date: Jun-2003
Location: Omaha, NE
Age: 51
Posts: 123
Country:
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I used to hear that chicks digested faster, and of course the smelly poop issue. Most of the actual objections were that they might transmit salmonella, but I don't see that as a huge risk if you aren't getting factory farmed birds. Really any animal can carry some strain of salmonella. Plus, a baby chick has more frail bones than an adult mouse, so supplementing them with a bit of calcium might be in order.
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