Nervous New Mom

I'm glad to know that I am not the only one who has been this way with their first batch. It sounds like kids. First kid, sterilize the dropped pacifier. Second kid, swish it around it your water glass, and shove it back in their mouth. lol

"Turns out chicks don't melt in rain" gave me a needed laugh.

My neighbor came over this evening, and he knows how I am fretting over keeping them safe. I got asked "are you gonna hire a security detail for them"? Seems I have been a bit fussy!

Thanks for some great replies.
Third kid, rub it off on the second kid's grubby shirt and tell them to give it back to their younger sibling?

Your neighbor is hilarious!
 
Predator proofing and serious respiratory disease or Mareks still stresses me out to this day, well over 10 years into keeping chickens.

You have so much time, love and money invested and that can all be wiped in one fowl (😉) swoop. For safety, What puts me at ease is tinkering with the coop. Adding more here and there, reassuring that they are safe.

For coop construction, the best advice I can give is AVOID CHICKEN WIRE. Whoever the bozo is who named it chicken wire should be flicked in the nose. It will do zilch against a motivated predator. Use Hardware cloth on openings, around the outside of the coop and anywhere else that makes you feel good about putting it there.

I also suggest avoiding automatic coop doors. They are a fad, but Anything that causes complacency in chicken keeping is a bad deal. Vigilance is key.

For disease concerns, just practice good husbandry and don't add new chickens to your flock without fully vetting and quarantining them. If you handle your chickens, wash your hands before doing so. If someone goes grocery shopping after touching their chickens who have MG, and you touch their same cart, it can pass to your flock just like that!

Pro tip - there are thousands of hand sanitizer stations out there that are no longer needed after the excess production during Covid. Our second hand store here ended up with 5 of them and I snagged a few for around the animals. Thou shall not pass unless you clean your hands to touch poopy farm animals 😉 just start asking the places you frequent if they have an extra or an abundance that you can purchase.

Anyway, a certain level of stress is expected, but the happiness and joy they bring is unmatched.
 
Predator proofing and serious respiratory disease or Mareks still stresses me out to this day, well over 10 years into keeping chickens.

You have so much time, love and money invested and that can all be wiped in one fowl (😉) swoop. For safety, What puts me at ease is tinkering with the coop. Adding more here and there, reassuring that they are safe.

For coop construction, the best advice I can give is AVOID CHICKEN WIRE. Whoever the bozo is who named it chicken wire should be flicked in the nose. It will do zilch against a motivated predator. Use Hardware cloth on openings, around the outside of the coop and anywhere else that makes you feel good about putting it there.

I also suggest avoiding automatic coop doors. They are a fad, but Anything that causes complacency in chicken keeping is a bad deal. Vigilance is key.

For disease concerns, just practice good husbandry and don't add new chickens to your flock without fully vetting and quarantining them. If you handle your chickens, wash your hands before doing so. If someone goes grocery shopping after touching their chickens who have MG, and you touch their same cart, it can pass to your flock just like that!

Pro tip - there are thousands of hand sanitizer stations out there that are no longer needed after the excess production during Covid. Our second hand store here ended up with 5 of them and I snagged a few for around the animals. Thou shall not pass unless you clean your hands to touch poopy farm animals 😉 just start asking the places you frequent if they have an extra or an abundance that you can purchase.

Anyway, a certain level of stress is expected, but the happiness and joy they bring is unmatched.
Thank you for the information. I had not thought about a hand sanitizer station. That is a good idea. Right now, I am just keeping a bottle of hand sanitizer next to my brooder, to use before and after handling/caring for the chicks. But one of those stations would be nice. I'll have to check out the second hand stores in the area.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom