During February and March, tom turkeys beguile hens with their magnificent gobbles and vivid visual displays. Shortly thereafter the hens begin nesting. Not only are turkey eggs larger than chicken eggs, they are covered with delicate brown speckles and tend to have a more acute taper on one end than chicken eggs do. The turkey hen constantly broods her eggs leaving only briefly to eat. When she is sitting on her nest, the hen is extremely vulnerable to predators.
A month later, turkey poults emerge from the eggs. The tiny poults punch open the egg with egg teeth (sharpened ridges on the beak which quickly vanish as the young turkeys begin to grow). Wild turkey poults leave the nest about a day after they hatch.
Wild turkeys face a terrifying host of predators including bobcats, raccoons, skunks, opossums, foxes, coyotes, armadillos, weasels, crows, owls, hawks, bald eagles, and a variety of snakes. To cope with this list wild poults quickly develop limited flight capability and begin roosting in trees two weeks after they hatch. Domestic turkey poults need substantial warmth to thrive and must be kept under a hot lamp and never given cold water. They need medicine supplements to prevent infection from chicken diseases and special calcium supplements to make up for the minerals which their wild cousins get from the bugs and arthropods which make up the bulk of their diet.
One of the most endearing traits of poults is the way in which they imprint on their mother and then follow her around. This trait is identical in domestic turkeys: when we ordered poults during my childhood, the little fluffy birds imprinted on me. Thereafter they would follow me around the barnyard peeping–which was very cute but made me worry about their well-being (imprinting being a two-way street). The young turkeys were affectionate and endlessly amusing. Indeed the Aztec trickster god Tezcatlipoca was strongly associated with turkeys because of their playful tricks and the deity was said to sometimes manifest as a turkey. In the picture below, Tezcatlipoca even looks a bit like a strutting Tom.
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April 19, 2011 at 3:14 PM
mom
There looks to be a duckling hanging out in the back of the third picture (the one of the Bourbon Red poults).
A flock of about 20 wild turkeys flew in front of the car on the way to work this morning. We were up on a ridge so we could look down on their backs as they flew down to the woods. It was a very special treat. They were quite beautiful, graceful and elegant in their flying–they are very large birds. On the same subject but different event, a turkey flew into the window of the Bureau of Public Debt, down the street from the store, and broke the window. They found the turkey in the office.
April 25, 2011 at 4:39 PM
Hieronymo
Ha, I didn’t notice the duck hiding back there. I wonder if that guy grew up to have image problems. Wild turkeys really are beautiful and it seems like their flocks keep growing. What happened with the debt turkey? Did they hire the bird to reform public debt?
August 31, 2011 at 4:35 PM
funkymonkey56
I remember reading about Tezcatlipoca as the “Jeweled Turkey.” The chicken was introduced to the Aztecs by the Spaniards.