I'm just finishing eating my first two eggs - they are 30 weeks old. I have two Americaunas and one Gold Laced Wyandotte. The eggs are light tinged blue. One of the former has been squatting when I touched her the last few days - I had no idea that was a sign! I hope you're as excited as I am -...
At the ripe old age of 6 months 4 days, my ladies laid their first couple of eggs. Wanting to showcase them, I'm baking them with a little aged emmentaler cheese. Would love to hear recipes you use to show off your eggs.
This is my first foray into chicken husbandry. In residence are two americaunas (Amelia and Kaia) and one gold laced wyandotte (snuggly sue). This is our journey together.
This is my first foray into chicken husbandry. I have two Americaunas (Amelia and Kaia) and a gold-laced Wyandotte (Snuggly Sue). This is our journey together.
Wildfire season has begun in Colorado already, and for the last day or so the smoke has been bad, along with the heat. I found helpful threads on how to manage heat for the chickens but nothing on whether I should be concerned about the smoke. I assume that like many other wilder birds their...
Found this great blog post on how to take care of hot chickens yesterday - we in Denver are already dealing with a string of 90+ degree days. I've tried so far the ice water and the cold melon both of which went over well...
The gals have been spending time outside with the warm weather (with the exception of the foot of snow we got two days ago which is now all gone!). I just put them in the dog crate and they dig and jump and cheep to their hearts' content. It's so adorable.
Also - I figured out why one was a...
Regarding chicks growing into roosters... I volunteer once a week outside Denver at a raptor rehab facility. Not to be gruesome, it is the cycle of life, but they are always looking for food for the birds of prey. The one I volunteer for is the Birds of Prey Foundation. There might be one near...
My three gorgeous chicks are growing differently. Two are getting bigger and feathering out much more rapidly than the third. When it comes time to move them outside in a couple of weeks, how do I handle that? Do I keep the third inside longer, wait til the last one is all feathered out, or move...