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  1. Ridgerunner

    How do I clean them??

    Certainly could. Is this the type of yellow you are talking about? It means he has the Silver gene which turns saddle and hackle feathers yellow. If so, he is not dirty, that is a natural color. Image taken from Feathersite.
  2. Ridgerunner

    Integrating to flock when on different foods

    Many of us have mixed age flocks and never feed Layer. Just offer a low calcium feed that fulfills nutritional needs and offer oyster shell on the side. That way you do not need to worry about harming chickens like chicks, roosters, broody hens, or molting hens by forcing them to eat more...
  3. Ridgerunner

    Ordered two roo's, back and fourth with my decision

    Short answer - Maybe Long and drawn out answer - Maybe. Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't. Each chicken has its own personality. Some can get along better with others where some can't. This includes the males. It is possible males will fight to the death to be flock master. It...
  4. Ridgerunner

    When Can They Go Outside?

    From the temperatures they should be OK but not if they get wet. Will that section of the run stay dry if it rains?
  5. Ridgerunner

    Bedtime drama

    Yeah, that's a hard one at 2 months. I see some things female but some also male. The posture is male but body shape more female. The legs are a bit heavy but not that heavy. The comb could be either, even at 8 or 9 weeks, but the bright red wattles makes me think probably a male. Does it...
  6. Ridgerunner

    Bedtime drama

    Can you post a couple of photos of the pre-teen in question. One closeup showing the comb and wattles and another still reasonably close but showing the legs and posture. At 2 months we might be able to settle the question as to whether it is a male or female. That might help in your...
  7. Ridgerunner

    Dehydrated food for chickens??? Can they eat this?

    The dehydrated part would not bother me. There was something going around on social media a few years back about throwing rice at weddings. Supposedly songbirds that ate the dried rice would die from the rice swelling up on their crop. Totally false. The risk is from people slipping on the...
  8. Ridgerunner

    Making hard decisions when it comes to a sick chicken

    I'm totally different from you in that I do not have individual chickens. I have a flock with constantly changing members so I do not feel comfortable responding to your question. I remove chickens for cause a lot. That has to be your personal decision. I do not envy you. Why do so many of...
  9. Ridgerunner

    Only one hatched chick, help!

    If she is off of the nest with that chick, put them in the incubator now. Assume she has abandoned the nest. Just do not take that chance.
  10. Ridgerunner

    What time of day do YOUR chickens lay?

    Chickens are as consistent about when they lay as everything else, which means not at all. That does not mean individuals won't be consistent, just not chickens in general. I've had hens lay an egg every morning at 9:00 am. If she did not lay by 9:00 she would not lay that day. I'd get 5 or...
  11. Ridgerunner

    18 1/2 week old Blue Laced Wyandotte

    Sorry. I have no idea what went wrong. As far as I'm concerned you did everything correctly.
  12. Ridgerunner

    First Year Molt?

    Some pullets skip the molt their first fall/winter and continue laying eggs until the molt the following fall. Some cockerels skip the molt also but they don't lay eggs anyway. Some do not skip the molt. It is an individual chicken thing. The main reason for the molt is the days getting...
  13. Ridgerunner

    Easter egger questions

    I agree it is not 100% reliable. That's why I said "You do not get any guarantees with this but it should improve your odds a little."
  14. Ridgerunner

    Integrating New Pullets

    It sounds like you are planning on two new chicks. I suggest a minimum of three. It is easier to integrate chickens if you have at least two. They are social animals and really want to be with other chickens. Unless you get sex linked chickens you are not guaranteed that they will both be...
  15. Ridgerunner

    New rooster

    My guess is that he is a mix. Could be a mix of two breeds are a mix of several. I really like that yellow on the black background. I had one like that that was a mix of Speckled Sussex, Black Australorp, and Buff Orpington. But there are many mixes that could make one look like that.
  16. Ridgerunner

    Does egg shape determine gender?

    Most of my individual hatches are 2/3 to 3/4 of the same sex, sometimes boys sometimes girls. I typically hatch about 40 to 45 chicks a year. Some years I will have more boys, some years more girls. But several times I've looked at a two year average, 80 to 90 chicks. Those are practically...
  17. Ridgerunner

    Integrating New Pullets

    Let's talk quarantine first. Diseases and parasites can be spread by them eating or drinking from shared containers, pecking at the ground with them living together, by insects like mosquitoes or grasshoppers, or just blowing on the wind. A little separation will give them some protection...
  18. Ridgerunner

    Feathers Feathers Feathers!!!!

    If you want to collect them and use them to make jewelry or fishing lures you can, but I just let mine rot. They go away pretty quickly.
  19. Ridgerunner

    Egg issues

    The Egg Quality Guide addresses many shell flaws. That's set up more for commercial operations than for us so they mention things that will not apply. Don't get too excited about any of them. Egg Quality Guide - The Poultry Site | The Poultry Site If you are selling them then those flaws...
  20. Ridgerunner

    Separating the Roosters, or WAY TOO MANY

    I find the easiest way to catch them is to take them off of the roost at night when it is dark, using a flashlight. I don't know how yours roost, if that is possible or not. As long as you respect your elders we'll get along great!!! :oops: :thumbsup
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