Figured it was probably normal but my 1st 4 hens I bought summer before last didn't have this happen (they were 12-16wk old mutts from someone in the area). These younger hens are hatchery chicks I ordered from Murray McMurray last summer.
Covered in blood, not blood spots. One rooster will be 2 this year and the other 1 year old, so both are still young and full of energy. Unfortunately at this time I have no space to separate any of the birds. Hopefully this summer I can get permanent coop finished then I will have the space to...
Lately I've noticed several of my eggs are quite bloody. Should I be concerned? They have been laying about 5 months now and figured that their bodies should be used to the laying by now. I also noticed that my hens are being mated bare. I have 2 roosters for 20 hens and figured that should be a...
I would still recommend a coop. Most runs, even roofed, are not predator proof. Wild animals can still dig under or rip through wire depending on what predators are in your area
These are my 8 month old puppies, they are Dobie/Lab mix. I adopted them in may from an animal shelter 2 hours from where i live. The one with the blue collar is Zeus and the red collar is Thor.
I keep my ducks a chickens together, the biggest thing I can think of is try and keep the water outside in the run or yard rather than the coop. Otherwise, they eat the same thing and do just fine as long as you provide some oyster shells as they require more calcium than chickens if laying.
Welcome to BYC, I am still pretty new to the site and have found it to be very helpful and informative. If I have any questions I can always find the answers here!
I would only feed oyster shells if you get eggs that are soft shelled or shell less, if not laying yet then they don't need it. I add oyster shell only because I have ducks that seem to be prone to soft shells and shell less eggs, eggs like that are kinda creepy, lol... My hens, however, end up...
Depends on what you are feeding them. If only purchased chick starter then no grit required. If you give them other things like grass or cracked corn then yes they need grit. I do not feed my adult chickens grit because they free range and pick up their own "grit" in the form of sand and pebbles...
I currently don't have any pictures to post but I just bought a Silver Fox buck to start a meat rabbit breeding program for my journey to raising 100% of my family's meat. Next month I will be buying a California White Doe