Following an early retinal lesion, aberrant uncrossed projections from the opposite, undamaged, retina form in the target visual nuclei. The present study has examined the development of such aberrant projections by making retinal lesions in newborn rat pups, and then examining the nature of the uncrossed retinocollicular projection at different ages following the lesion. Intravitreal injections of horseradish peroxidase were made into the intact eye, and the uncrossed projection was subsequently revealed histochemically. A mature aberrant projection forms as early as postnatal day 9. On postnatal days 5 and 2, aberrant projections are discernable amongst the exuberant uncrossed terminals of normal developing rats, although the former have not matured to form the dense terminal fields characteristic of older projections. Aberrant projections were also detectable as early as 12 h following the lesion, revealed as a relative increase in the density of uncrossed label. These results indicate that lesion-induced plastic responses by intact retinal arbors are initiated shortly after the insult, and they caution the use of retinal lesions in studies of normal retinotopic connectivity during development.