For me, when I switch my chicks over from their brooder to the main coop, it takes them about three days to get the hang of it.
The only way that works for me is to catch them, one by one, and stick them in the coop. It's annoying, but they always learn fast, and soon they'll all be going into...
"God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference."
I think this belongs in the former.
Yes, I would definitely encourage giving it a go! Getting a head start on the chicks early in spring is great, that way you might already be getting pullet eggs by the time late summer comes around.
So glad this post could be of some help. Hope your chick-raising goes well! :D
It's a bit ambiguous, though, and you can see how a beginner like I was could have read that the wrong way.
I think, in general, that article (and so many others like it) acts as if chicks are way less hardy than they are. People new to keeping chickens are almost always going to be extra...
Here, a quick search brought this article up. I'm sure this is the kind of stuff I was getting this misinformed idea from. And the person who wrote this (apparently) has over ten years of experience raising chicks, so it's not someone inexperienced...
It's been years, so I can't recall exactly, but when I was doing all my initial research on how to raise chicks, I came across a lot of users advising that it's a must to brood them indoors for the first few weeks.
Maybe (and hopefully) more people have caught on by now that it's not true. I...
When I first began raising chicks in 2021, I was misinformed that the only way to raise them in safefully winter/spring was to keep them inside for the first 4-6 weeks of their life. I was told that the cold of an outdoor coop, plus any drafts, would be dangerous for young chicks.
Boy, is that...
Hello! I'm new here! :D
Just thought I'd pop in and share my recent sourdough successes. I started baking sourdough in 2022, but after baking flop after flop, I gave up.
However, I recently decided to give it another go, and I'm so grateful I did. :celebrate
Look at this beautiful product...
So, I solved the mystery.
I accidentally sold one of my older silkie hens, not the pullet! Even though the pullet is only 4 months old, she's the same size as the older hens.
So it is the silkie pullet laying the tiny white egg, which solves everything. I caught her in the nesting box...
Yes, I do know that. However, all my EEs have been laying for a year now, and none of them lay a white egg. Unless for some reason one of them didn't start laying until they were quite old, and by some crazy chance they're the only EE I've ever had to lay a white egg? Plus, why is it so tiny...