It warms my heart to see chickens helping out in this way.![]()
Chicken behaviour the recipe for understanding human social dynamics
While growing up, people didn't make much sense to Summer, but chickens always did. Now, Summer is using what they learnt to help other children with autism understand human interactions.www.abc.net.au
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Summer Farrelly has written a book and developed an animal-assisted learning program to help others living with autism. (ABC News: Amal Wehbe)
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My own experience with live chickens was pretty limited, and not really all that positive. After reading this article, I wish I had paid more attention to them, but it was a bit of a fiasco from the start...
My Brother had bought his wife a dozen cute little yellow baby peeps for mothers' day. Not sure what he was thinking, or -if- he was thinking but, sadly, he bought them several days before mothers' day and by the time he gave them to her they were these nasty looking molting little adolescent chickens. His wife was not a "chicken person" to start with and would have nothing to do with them (decades later, I still razz him about this). The chickens ended up spending their fairly short lives in a smallish pen at our parents' place where I became just familiar enough with them that I almost swore off ever eating chicken again. Ugh!
On top of that, as soon as we put a big (seemingly well protected) sack of chicken feed in the shed, we magically acquired a thriving population of -very- healthy looking and well fed rats. This was the same shed that, for years, had dog food stored in it with nary a rat in sight.
Once the chickens met their fate and the chicken feed was gone, the rats disappeared as promptly as they had showed up.

