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Published - Tuesday, April 08, 2008
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Why did these chicks get left by the road?

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One white-crested black Polish chick and 105 fuzzy yellow chicks are recouping at the Winona Area Humane Society after being discarded in a ditch off U.S. Highway 14 Sunday night.

Winona police officers Paul Anderson and Eric Mueller found the flock about 10:15 p.m. in a grassy ditch off U.S. Highway 14 near Saint Mary’s University.
A flock of chicks huddles together under a heat lamp Monday at the WInona Area Humane Society. Winona police officers discovered 106 chicks alongside Highway 14 Sunday. The chicks are recovering and will be taken in by Chicken Run Rescue in Minneapolis. (Photo by Melissa Carlo/Winona Daily News)

Officer Mueller said they found a couple boxes down in the woods and the nearby flock clustered along a ditch. Two bystanders helped the officers corral the shivering chicks.

“They were standing there looking at you all soaked and peeping at you,” Mueller said. “It’s just tragic. It’s cold. It’s raining and these little chicks are so susceptible to temperature. I don’t know why anyone would want to throw them out.”

One chick died. Some lost toes. Others’ combs were badly scraped.

Police took the flock to the Winona Area Humane Society, where volunteers worked late into the night to create make-shift incubators using heat lamps, heat pads and kiddy pools. Mueller called them “pros.”

Humane Society volunteers made a late-night chicken feed pick-up at Kupietz Feed and Sales. They dipped the chicks’ beaks in sugar water to teach them how to drink in the necessary electrolytes. They put salve on the chicks’ wounds.

“We got them settled within an hour, and we watched them for the next hour,” said longtime volunteer Tracy Morgan, who used to have two pet chickens.

Winona Area Humane Society Vice President Deborah Stowe stayed all night to make sure the chicks survived the night. After the trauma the chicks endured, Stowe said the next few days will determine if they live.



One scruffy fellow wasn’t expected to make it overnight. It pulled through with enough spunk left to keep up with the rest of the furry flock chirping, clucking and pecking at feed under heat lamps Monday afternoon.

“They got banged up,” Stowe said. “We haven’t lost one yet, knock on wood.”

The chicks, about 10 days old, have different colored bands with numbers around their legs. Officer Mueller believed the chicks were tossed out intentionally, because they weren’t found in the middle of the road and no one called to say they were missing chicks.

Mueller estimated the chicks had been outside about a half hour.

“They’re little baby chicks. C’mon. Their best hope was they were going to freeze to death or get picked off by raccoons,” Mueller said. “They’re living creatures, and they’re entitled to the same dignity that any creature gets.”

Mary Britton Clouse, founder of Minneapolis chicken rescue organization called Chicken Run Rescue, said

little humanity goes into the treatment of chickens.

“These little guys really fall through the cracks,” she said. “They’re exempt from humane slaughter laws and animal cruelty laws.”

Chicken Run Rescue, which has taken nearly 300 birds since 2001, hopes to find homes for the 106 abandoned chicks.

“We want them to go to a home and not someone’s dinner table,” Stowe said. “We figured if they escaped death once they deserve a second chance.”

Clouse sent an e-mail adoption announcement to a network list of 180 people in the seven-county metro area. Interested adopters must fill out an application found on the nonprofit’s Web site at www.brittonclouse.com/

chickenrunrescue/.

Chickens make excellent companions and can live for about 15 years, unless they’re bred for things such as reaching market weight in six weeks, Clouse said.

There’s a boom in having backyard flocks, but Clouse said their long life expectancy requires a committed adopter.

“They’re bright and smart and funny and fascinating and beautiful — all the good things that make life worth living,” Clouse said.

Contact reporter Amber Dulek at amber.dulek@lee.net or (507) 453-3513.
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 Comments »

Jack Sparrow wrote on Apr 10, 2008 3:42 PM:

" I'll take a few...they get pretty tasty eventually. Nothing better than a cicken dinner! "

wilson wrote on Apr 9, 2008 2:14 PM:

" Thanks so much to all those involved in saving these animals. They deserve a chance at a wonderful life. Why is the University doing such an outdated research project? Doesn't sound like a quailty, progressive school to me. "

kdavis wrote on Apr 9, 2008 1:07 PM:

" I am heartened by Amber Dulek's article, "Why did these chicks get left by the road?" The rallying to save the chicks shows there are indeed people who care about chickens and don't want to see them suffer.

These chicks were lucky to be saved from the "testosterone" experiments that awaited them. These experiments have been done for decades. Injecting chicks with adult male hormones to chart the abnormal aggression that results is not only cruel; it reinvents a wheel that has been rolled so many times there's no tread left. It's gratifying to know that the chicks are reviving and may actually be adopted into good homes. As a sanctuary director for 20 years, I can vouch for chickens. Thank you, Winona Daily News!

Karen Davis, President
United Poultry Concerns
PO Box 150
Machipongo, Virginia 23405
www.upc-online.org
"

yarnivek wrote on Apr 8, 2008 4:37 PM:

" I'll bet it took someone hours to come up with the title of this article. "

myepinion wrote on Apr 8, 2008 4:01 PM:

" If they were stolen give them back. Ask St. Mary's for the money the Humane Society spent. All that will happen now is another 100+ chicks will get purchased for St. Mary's for their experiments....and now there are 200+ chicks without good futures. Stupid. "

Trymaleagain wrote on Apr 8, 2008 12:13 PM:

" Gee I wonder what the St. Mary's science experiment consisted of? Were they going to feed these chicks up to 8 lbs. and then cut their heads off? At least now they have stuffed animals to poop on. "

ecosheba wrote on Apr 8, 2008 11:24 AM:

" These chicks were part of a Saint Mary's Universitt Science experiment and were stolen from the lab sometime between 8pm Saturday and 8am Monday. The whole department and the students involved in the study were heart broken that the chicks had been taken. We were especially worried that they had been released into the cold weather. I am glad they have been found. I just hope the the 100 chicks who are all male, will find homes. If not there are Eagle and other bird of prey rehabilitation facilities that will take the birds for food. "

Hot Rod Otis wrote on Apr 8, 2008 7:59 AM:

" Those fuzzy yellow chicks will grow into some nice White Rock broiler chickens........just sayin'. "

JED wrote on Apr 8, 2008 7:34 AM:

" If only they would have crossed to the other side of the road... "

Realtor Star wrote on Apr 8, 2008 4:06 AM:

" I thought all the chicks were at Spring Break. "


The comments above are from readers. In no way do they represent the views of the Winona Daily News.

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