Wifezilla wrote:
Animal activism and logic have very little to do with each other.
Well, I see what you're saying, but honestly, I think a lot of us here consider ourselves to be "animal activists" because we treat our chickens humanely, as opposed to crowding them into notebook paper...
EEs are some of the friedliest chickens, and they are not typically aggressive with other birds--not submissive, either. They tend to be sort of above the fray, not as interested in the pecking order as some other breeds. My Ameraucanas are the same way. EEs tend to have larger, more vividly...
Oh, how terrible that must have been.
Sometimes it's tough to tell what kind of a mother hen a broody will be. One of our Silkies, Sylvie, is WONDERFUL. She has even adopted a nearly week-old orphaned baby, one I didn't even have to sneak under her. I simply presented the chick to her on my...
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I totally agree, Pasofino. In my experience, Easter Egger egg colors are usually a little more vivid simply because hatcheries are breeding specifically for color. I love my wheatens, though, even if they have a paler egg. They're still pretty.
If you're buying for egg color (or...
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That made me laugh like crazy.
My contribution: When you spend three years trying to teach your blind "special needs" chicken how to eat from your hand. (And finally it works!)
... and then when it works so well, you now have to explain Hildy to EVERYONE (she'e not attacking you!)...
Uh huh except for veterans, VA and Medicare which is a HUGE number of people who have earned those benefits.
Those are all socialized, government run health care programs.
I think you may be missing the point if you think the White House is trying to tell people what they can say and what they...
In an emergency, crush up dry dog or cat food with water until it's about the consistency of yogurt, and feed that. (Or you can mix it with the whey that you pour off the top of some plain yogurt). Make sure it's not too cool.
Poor baby.
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They will totally fool you sometimes. One of my speckled sussex girls has a HUGE comb, floppy, like a leghorn. Great layer. The other SS girls all have normal combs. One of my Cuckoo Marans developed a big, red comb at something like two weeks--she was also lighter than the others. The...
I can tell a huge difference in taste between heritage breeds and grocery store chickens. I don't believe I've ever tasted pastured, humanely raised Cornish Xes. Perhaps they would have more taste. The chickens from the store taste like cardboard, and are very mushy.
I was under the impression...
Oh, how I love those first few crows! We had a rooster once whose legs were so long, he was like a gangly teenager. Whenever he tried to crow, hed lose his balance.
(He did eventually get the hang of it.)
Mine normally start at four or five months, but as other people have said here, it just...
So maybe some breeds are more prone to easily pull feathers from? idunno I have some cochin/EE mixes and it does appear that a couple of my pullets have redder combs than the others. That's all I know however cause I'm new to that breed/mix.
I think that's definitely true. For instance, I...
Sometimes they will peck a hole in the egg because there is a little calcium "pimple" on the egg shell. (I guess those are irresistible to certain birds.) They want to peck off the little spot!
Do your eggs have any bumps? That might be it.
I keep the door shut if it's particularly windy and cold, because for the most part, the birds will go out in anything. My coop isn't heated, either, so it's not usually much warmer inside than out. I guess they figure "we might as well go outside!" They were sunbathing today, and it only got up...
That's terrible, but it's true that some otherwise nice people just don't "get" how smart and fun and friendly chickens are, and how devastating losing them can be. (When I lost my favorite hen, I cried for three days and even took time off work. It's a good thing my boss keeps chickens!)
I'm...
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Actually, yes it was:
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I never said it wasn't an honest mistake with her--who can imagine purposefully trying to destroy someone's hatch?--but it's apparently an honest mistake for which she doesn't understand all the implications. As most hatchers know, they're not "just...
I'm so sorry that happened!
If she doesn't understand the loss of life, hopefully she'll understand the money. You might explain to her that saving a half a cent of electricity for an evening of turned off holiday lights certainly doesn't make up for losing $40 (or $60 or whatever) worth of...
It was six degrees here this morning (BRRR!), with winds gusting up to 30 mph.
I thought I'd just drop a note here, too: my coop is not heated and all my chickens are doing quite well (although they were very happy when I brought in fresh water!). I don't know that it is much warmer inside the...