Thanks for the reply! I will try to take the eggs out, soak up the water, and put them back in. Cross your fingers and toes for me. These babies have apparently been at 60-70% with even higher spikes most of the incubation period. I imagine I'll have a lot of drowned chicks :(
I'd like to similarly piggyback. I am getting a group of 5 ducklings straight run. One black, one chocolate and 3 my choice of blue, lavender, chocolate or black. Obviously I won't know which will end up hens or drakes but I'd like to maximize my chances of eventually being able to retain one...
I have realized recently that my humidity has been WAYYYY too high throughout incubation (equipment issues). Hatch day is in 5 days. What should I do? Can I very drastically reduce humidity by opening the thing a billion times today (there's still water in the troughs and it's not feasible to...
That's SO similar to my situation! AWESOME! Have you had issues when bringing roos back into the main flock, other than minor scuffling? Do you do anything that helps to ease tensions when you reintegrate?
Thanks for the response. I'm glad you are able to keep three roos in each flock. How many hens do you have in each of your flocks, on average? Have you had any problems when you swap the 'alpha' roos and they squabble?
...the pertinent threads but I'd love some advice specific to my situation, or sounding boards to bounce off of people. I have a 'main' chicken coop *without* a run and free range my chickens from that. I have room in it for about 30 chickens, give or take. I have a separate coop with room for...
Thank you! The two light ones have similar combs and the dark ones have similar combs (no nodules on the side). It's quite a coincidence that the only grey ones got that comb, and all the dark ones got the other comb. I didn't think there was a link between feather color and comb type.. is there???
Now that I have gotten a couple pictures to go through, my phone was not having it for a while.. these are all from black Copper Maran over my Easter Egger who is heterozygous for both pea comb and blue egg. I'm trying to determine if it is the grey chicks who will have heterozygous pea and the...
Well she laid a very blue but not green egg. I'll breed her to my BCM roo and of course see if I get any girls that lay brown (not green) eggs, but that means I have to keep her daughters separate/marked/banded from thing 1s (EE with heterozygous pea comb and heterozygous blue) until they start...
Bluebell turned out to be a he :/ I was just given this Easter egger in a batch of birds. There were a bunch of birds and he said he thinks one lays green. Everyone is in quarantine and no green eggs so far but it's ferbruary, she is anywhere from 1 to 2.5, and she just moved, so I'm not all...
Thank you for your reply! I will keep them separate for a month and will check for everything you mentioned. My friends know the deal and will also plan to isolate.
I recently had the opportunity to procure 25 hens and 2 roosters as a bulk type of deal. The person I got them from did not keep track of individual ages but said they range from 1-2.5 years old. There are some specific breeds and a few mixes. I brought them all home with the intention of...
...comb, we know that the blue egg gene from Bluebell to that chick. Does that mean that the genes regarding color from the original CCL roo were *not* passed on? Specifically the whiting gene? Or does that travel separately so to speak? Is there a good chance that including Bluebell's...
Yes, she's on the up and up and I straight up asked her. The other five she gave me (that she didn't inherit) also didn't have clipped wings. And they were kept in a totally enclosed coop. So. I have zero reason to believe she'd be lying about it.
I inherited a few chickens yesterday, including two red sex links. The woman I got them from said they came with the house, she doesn't know how old they are but they started laying 10 months ago (January), which would put them at right about 16 months old/born summer of 2020. That's also right...
If I get one that's p+/p+ will that be obvious any earlier? It would be helpful to know, to be able to give away the straight combed chicks early on and keep the ones I'd like to breed. In the first cross of my EE to BCM I can only get P/p+ or p+/p+ anyway. Later I'll have a chance of any of...