Search results for query: *

  1. CATRYNA

    Comment by 'CATRYNA' in article 'Using Sand In Your Chicken Coop'

    I do and it has worked out fine.
  2. CATRYNA

    Comment by 'CATRYNA' in article 'Using Sand In Your Chicken Coop'

    We move our chicks onto sand as soon as they hatch. Within hours they are scratching and eating meal worms.
  3. CATRYNA

    Comment by 'CATRYNA' in article 'Using Sand In Your Chicken Coop'

    Over time you have to add more.
  4. CATRYNA

    Comment by 'CATRYNA' in article 'Using Sand In Your Chicken Coop'

    Our family has been keeping chickens for over 10 years now and have always used sand. We use a horse rake covered in hardware cloth to clean and it works great. Never smells . . . ever! We have always used contractors sand, but after reading your article I think our next load of sand will be...
  5. CATRYNA

    Comment by 'CATRYNA' in article 'Mixed flocks - How does it work?'

    We have a mixed flock of 36 hens, two female ducks and 1 female turkey. We used to have more ducks (13) and turkeys, (6) but that was years ago and our flock has diminished with time. We have 3 pens that house them at night; on average each pen is between 65sf-100sf and they are free to choose...
  6. CATRYNA

    Brabanters

    We live in Ramona, CA and after searching for 3 years my daughter found these 6 guys at a feed store, in Escondido, CA, a half hour from us. Three of them have wonderful mohawks, one not such a good one and two without mohawks, but one of those has a huge muff. And, one of them is a Roo. We...
  7. CATRYNA

    Comment by 'CATRYNA' in article 'Raising Baby Chicks- Do’s and Dont’s'

    And, don't forget the meal worms once the chicks are a few days old.
  8. CATRYNA

    Organic feed at Costco

    It's an extruded, highly processed at high heat mixture of wheat, wheat, soy, corn and junk. It's like organic cheerios. So, for a $20 bag of 40 lbs, anyone can call their eggs organic and sell them as such. Very disappointing. Indeed. When I saw the ingredients I immediately knew this was...
  9. CATRYNA

    Organic feed at Costco

    I would rather go to a feed store and have an in and out experience rather than deal with the impossible parking and crowded conditions of any Costco.
  10. CATRYNA

    Egg Skelter

    Excellent, glad you found something that works. The Egg Skelter comes in 2 or 3 different sizes, but none of them worked for us, either.
  11. CATRYNA

    Growing fodder for chickens

    When we started growing fodder several years ago, we started with Barley and then went to Wheat around a year ago, because the local Barley wasn't viable and didn't sprout. We have tried Oats, but were not very successful with it. I have found that is true with most people. We have also sprouted...
  12. CATRYNA

    Growing fodder for chickens

    Well said. I agree that feeding fodder "only" would be a bad idea. My chickens also get non GMO or (no corn/no soy) feed, along with many different seeds. Some of our hens are 2.5 years old and are still laying 4 or 5 eggs per week. Our younger ones lay 6 eggs a week. I also ferment, which as...
  13. CATRYNA

    Growing fodder for chickens

    I have grown fodder for years and I can feed far more birds on 5 or 6 lbs of fodder than 12 or 16 oz of grain, that I initially started with, if you get my drift. The fodder is part of their diet. I have friends who add fodder to their goats, Buffalo, horses and cattle diets. It's grass! And...
  14. CATRYNA

    Growing fodder for chickens

    They certainly do compared to the original grain of past decades or even hundreds or thousands of years ago.
  15. CATRYNA

    Silkie / Japanese Bantam Crosses

    Mopeep and Bopeep, together, hatched 13 eggs; 8 roos and 7 pullets. Here are their pullets at 4 months.
  16. CATRYNA

    Deep litter method

    We use sand in our pens. We don't have "coops" per se. Living in SOCAL, we have open pens with part of it either covered with a plywood roof or tarp, where the roosts are. We have found that sand keeps the smell down and using a horse rake with 1/4" hardware cloth zip-tied on it acts as a very...
  17. CATRYNA

    Growing fodder for chickens

    Wheat berries are just wheat grain. Once they have been sprouted there is no gluten; it then becomes vegetation.
  18. CATRYNA

    Growing fodder for chickens

    I, personally, have been on a gluten free diet for 4 years. We feed our chickens fodder also; the fodder coming from wheat berries. The feed we give our chickens, ducks, turkeys and guineas is GMO free with no corn or soy.
  19. CATRYNA

    Growing fodder for chickens

    Too cool would be below the 60's°
Back
Top Bottom