We used it for our chickens for five plus years in a tropical environment and the sand was hardly ever dry enough to be overly dust. You can just spray it down in the dry season to help curb the dust and improve cooling. However your chickens instinct is to find nice dry dusting areas. They can...
Our chicks that the mamas hatched out and had on the sand the first day never had a problem with the sand. You just need to be sure the chicks know where the food and water are.
You can adD some wood ash to the areas where they like to do their dust baths and that should help with lice and mites. We never had mite problems after we discovered the wood ash.
I found sand as a bedding quite by accident five years ago. It worked out so well I searched the internet to see if I was the only one that knew of its wonders.
It started with having leftover sand from a building project (in our area it’s just black volcanic sand from the beaches or rivers.)...
I haven’t been picky about which feed the Hubby brings home. I’ve noticed that it’s different every time from the previous bag. I was kinda wondering how many different brands of layer feed :popthere were. In the last country we worked in there was only one layer feed and it had antibiotics in...
Good to know your girls aren’t guilty of this. It gives me hope. Yes they do have oyster shells. And I’m feeding a layer feed. We have two Americanas and two golden commets as well. We haven’t seen any soft or strange shells from them since we started giving oyster shells. Our two GLWs and one...
I’m more interested in knowing if this is a Wyandotte issue. Because we are moving to another state and will be getting all new chickens. So I don’t want to get them again if that’s the case. I do love how pretty they are. :love
I have three Wyandotte’s that are seven months old and just coming into lay. This is my first experience with Wyandotte’s. We have caught two of these hens laying soft eggs. I’m wondering if this is a breed thing. Anyone else notice their Wyandotte’s having these issues. Is it just because they...
These hens and the rooster are my newest babies. They are the result of the red comet hens and a local rooster we named Fowler. (You can’t get RC roosters only hens) He was a pretty rooster his daughters would go broody about 90% of the time. I bred his sons back to the RCs untill I was getting...
We actually have a lot of rose combs here and they do quite well. It’s true that combs can help with temperature but my birds don’t seem to notice the difference. It’s not really a hot humid climate but a warm humid climate. We average low to mid 80s year round sometimes we can get into the...
I have only use this once before and it was really successful. Nine eggs in nine chicks out. I know that’s not normally what happens. But the eggs were from my own chickens and only a few days old. If I did get eggs over I would put 9 in the incubator and for any leftover eggs I would try and...
There's a guy who used to be on BYC that made regular trips from California to his home in the Phillipines. I think he imported over 10 different breeds to PH. He designed a special carrier that allowed him to put a couple hundred eggs on the seat next to him.
I think he still has a Facebook...
We live in Southeast Asia and currently there’s only one layer breed available and it’s a hybrid. Possibly red comet. I’m not really sure. They just call them lay horns (which confuses things). :confused: And we can order meat birds as well. Those might be a Cornish cross. The problem is you...