Just to confirm; (the Salmon Faverolles are a little higher)
2 Easter Egger Started Chick Pullets @ $8 ea
2 Salmon Faverolles Started Chick Pullets @ $10 ea
1 Buff Orpington Started Chick Cockerel @ $5
Poultry total $61
If you'd like me to place your order, please email me directly...
We Ship! Day old chicks, started chicks, started pullets and fertile hatching eggs.
Hatching weekly 3/1-5/31 and bi-weekly 6/14-9/27. Fertile Eggs are available year round.
Breeds Available include: Black Australorp, Buff Orpington, Cochin (blue, black, splash) Easter Egger, French Black...
I don't recommend shipping 3 day old chicks, they would not survive. I could ship them a little older when they are not as heat dependent, though. I need your zip code at quote shipping cost.
Thank you,
Laura, What Da Flock Farm, LLC
Yes I can ship to MA. The only started pullets I have right now are Norwegian Jaerhon ($18/ea) and I have some a few started chicks (2-5 weeks) available in the following: Norwegian Jaerhon, Gold Laced Wyandotte ($8/ea) and Barred Rock ($7).
Please let me know what else I can do for you...
We Ship!* Day Old Chicks and Fertile Hatching Eggs.
Hatching through 9/2/16. Fertile Eggs are available year round.
Breeds Available include: Ameraucana, Black Australorp, Buff Orpington, Golden Laced Wyandotte, Norwegian Jaerhon, Plymouth Barred Rock. Breed descriptions are listed below...
Day Old Chicks (we ship!*) and Fertile Hatching Eggs. Hatching through 9/2/16.
Fertile Eggs are available year round.
Breeds Available include: Ameraucana, Black Australorp, Buff Orpington, Golden Laced Wyandotte, Norwegian Jaerhon, Plymouth Barred Rock. All breed descriptions are listed...
Hi there, I know it's been a couple weeks since you posted, but would you still happen to have this cockerel? I'm just over the WI border and am in need of an amercaucana male.
Please let me know.
Thanks,
Laura
I'm a backyard breeder and we recently processed the excess birds that have collected over the hatching season. We also included my Gold Laced Wyandotte rooster that was for breeding because of our failure to attempt to correct his behavioral issues for several months. When I dressed out this...
Thanks for all the replies. I figured out how to solve my problem though. I have a styrofoam incubator that can handle the 2 small orders I've got while my regular hatch is in lockdown. I hadn't considered the differing humidity needs, and don't want to mess with that.
Again, thanks all for...
I have a good size rosewood incubator with 4 drawers. Can I feasibly have 1 or 2 drawers on lockdown but continue to turn others on a different tray that are on a different schedule, or is lockdown a strict "do not disturb" procedure?
There's a common belief that animals will not eat what they cannot smell. If your birds are clogged with mucus they probably can't smell, plus, it's not easy to eat when it's difficult to breath.
It's sounds like you've got a respiratory infection spreading through your coop. I would...
I just re-read your post. If the foam was eaten yesterday and she has not passed any in her stool as yet, I would give some water (if not drinking itself) as well as some moistened food (wet enough to syringe feed) then examine first stool for foam particles. If none, take her to a vet. If...
First of all, treat the frostbite with neosporin or other triple antibiotic.
I noticed nobody had responded to you so even though I don't have much experience with chickens, I do have plenty with other animals, as well as some medical background.
The bird may not be eating because the...
I'm sorry for your loss. For future reference...I've read that it is best to separate a bird with frostbite, due to the fact that the other chickens will peck at it thus causing infection to occur, spread, and/or worsen. You should also treat any areas not infected with neosporin to prevent...
Ridgerunner, I need a little help sorting through the information you gave me. I know it's been a few days, but I'm hoping you see this msg.
I'm going to give you a little background, and I'm hoping maybe you could help me think this through. Before I noticed the bad feet, I had 2 roosters...
Does anyone know what the time-frame would be for the fertilization issue? If I separate them today could tomorrow's eggs still be populated from the other rooster?
It must be genetic. I'm thinking Plymouth Rocks might be predisposed to this defect since I've seen at least two other threads mentioning crooked toes in this breed. It's definitely not inbreeding because my roos came from a different breeder than my hens.