World News- Indian Chickens
Sally Gilson Getcatcrazy
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Came across we animals’ media reporting Chickens and India’s summer months, temperatures can easily go above 40°C. India is the third largest egg producer in the world and a leading exporter, and poultry farm sheds are often built in open fields where during the summer afternoon temperatures soar and can reach up to 48°C. In these conditions, the birds inside the sheds bear the brunt of this extreme heat. Even though some of the farms have overhead fans or standing fans, cooling the entire area is difficult, especially with regular power outages in these areas. Death due to heat exhaustion is a regular occurrence in these temperatures.
Cages have water sprinklers that are pressure activated when a hen pecks on it. Some also have a thin plastic trough placed alongside the outer part of the cages where water is released at particular times of the day. Despite these features, our photojournalist witnessed hens panting constantly and birds lying on the floor with their wings spread wide, desperately trying to cool themselves.
Both egg-laying hens and broiler birds are bought from hatcheries when they are just a few days old. These chicks are kept in an open floor shed, where they are fed constantly on a mix which includes growth hormones and a variety of medicines and supplements.
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On egg farms, after 120 days, the now adult hens are shifted into cages of roughly three feet by two feet in size, in groups of up to six, balancing themselves on the thin metal wires of the floors. Our photojournalist noted that many of the hens had missing feathers and visible skin rashes. Their beaks were blunted or chipped off – this is in order to prevent injuries from attacks given their intense confinement. The hens will stay in these cages for 18 to 24 months, after which their egg production declines and they are sold to slaughterhouses.
On broiler farms, the chicks remain in open floor sheds until they reach slaughter weight, which can be as soon as four weeks. These sheds can hold between 8,000 and 15,000 chicks.
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“The farm I had gone to had two main sheds – one for the adult egg laying hens and the other shed which only had younger chicks. The adult hens were placed four in a cage while the younger ones were on an open floor set up. When I was shooting in the egg laying shed, the moment I would go close to a cage, the hens would start getting scared and agitated and turn away to the other end of the small cage. There was a visible panic that would set in.
In the shed with the younger chicks, I walked and sat amongst them as there weren’t any cages. The chicks started approaching me and explored my shoes, my camera, my hands, my clothes – pecking lightly or just bobbing their heads around, inspecting me curiously. Some even came hobbling towards me similar to how puppies come running towards a new person. There was so much of an innocent trust and curiosity in them! That was such a stark contrast to how the adult hens were behaving in the cages.” ― S. Chakrabarti, animal photojournalist
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Rows of battery cages are stacked up on top of each other inside tin-roofed, open-sided sheds where hot wind passes through the open sides. Each of these sheds can hold anywhere between 8,000 and 18,000 egg-laying hens. Despite confining hens to battery cages violating India’s animal welfare law, an estimated?400 million hens?in the country continue to live their lives confined to such cages due to lack of government enforcement.
When I was only a young girl my grandfather had chickens who ran around happily they were treasured and looked after which meant we had great eggs, often enough people now who are conscientious will take on birds that are worn out from expecting to lay so many eggs, I cannot imagine the torture these poor birds are going through and how humans can conflict so much pain and cruelty.
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