Just before I left the elementary school and went to high school, my guidance counselor brought us into her office and asked us what we wanted to be, she then compiled a list of information for us on what we told her we wanted to be. This helped me because I already had an idea on what I wanted...
Any chance you can go to local farm supply and get a couple leg traps and set around the fence, then when you catch it SSS. But be careful they probably are protected.
It is not a question if an immigrant wants to learn to speak English or not, if you come to live and work in this country when you are in public you speak English, or exceptions, what you do at home is your business and I could care less what you speak because I cannot hear you, but in public...
If you have a lava lamp then take the base and get a plastic cup and put duck tape around the cup, and fasten the cup upside down on top of the lava lamp base, then take a knife and cut a small hole in the bottom of the cup for the light to shine through. This is how I candle my eggs and the...
You have three options that I can think of right off the bat. First you can get a grass carp from a garden supply, farm supply, or a truck that brings fish to your farm supply. Second you can cut the Lilly pads stem off from under neath the water several times and eventually this will kill...
In the summer their heads stay plenty warm, but in winter instinct kicks in and they instinctively do it. My hens with large combs have never been frostbit, but my roosters with their big combs constantly get frostbitten, cant understand why roosters don't protect their heads though?
Thanks for the info on breed. During winter you should not have a problem since hens tuck their heads between their body and their wings to keep the comb, wattles and their entire head warm, roosters on the other hand for some reason do not tuck their heads under their wings and often get frostbit.
Have no clue what kind of chicken a Amberlink's is, but some of my black sex link and barred rocks have flop combs and are perfectly healthy and productive. My neighbor has brown leghorns and all of them have flop combs and he says that he thinks those lay better. You have nothing to worry...