I read buttons as buttholes.
My eyes are playing tricks on me!


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I read buttons as buttholes.
My eyes are playing tricks on me!
Soooo crazy. I'm pretty sure at grandmas house something tunneled into the wall, died, hatched flies, and somehow they got in the house?My Mexican told me the same thing and guess who put pennies in ziplock bag with water hanging in her coop.
I tried everything.
When I tell you nothing worked...nothing worked and I tried new things each day that week.
And poof they were gone.
And not in my whole yard no...just the coop.
Yeah, button chicks can easily squeeze through a 1" square mesh.that’s kinda how i lost the 2nd one.....i opened the hutch expecting to find the little brown one dead because of that cold rain/wind/snow mix that came in and killed a few of my coturnix outside. But in actuality the buttons did really well in the outdoor hutch as they had the enclosed area where their food and water was to huddle in draft free. As i was cleaning the run today, I saw a small hole in the dirt at the bottom (just big enough for a button to squeeze through). the brown one was the most adventurous of the bunch so I’m pretty sure that’s how it got out. Now whether it flew out of the run like the 2nd or simply got squished and died in the run is still unknown. just like my “unfortunate” learning curve with coturnix......if I ever decide to hatch buttons again, I will definitely be more prepared with secure indoor housing!
A young Self Blue (aka Lavender) tom stalking a fly.Oh heck no ...I am not dealing with this again this summer.
I will burn my coop down.
Shaa he is nice!A young Self Blue (aka Lavender) tom stalking a fly.
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He was successful in capturing the fly. I have also seen the little ones stalk and capture mosquitoes.
i was wondering if adding compost enzymes to the run would be beneficial?? I started out spreading straw but shoveled it all out after about 4-5 months and switched to pine bark, crushed brick, and sand mixture. Then I started spreading the pdz weekly in the run and the coops. In the coops I use pine shavings but I remove them every couple of weeks and replace with fresh. i haven’t tried leaves yet but i still have a bunch. When I shoveled out the straw base, I put it in the aviary area and raked it out just before putting down the clover seed. My biggest issue is that this region (Southern Indiana/Ohio Valley) is now considered one of the rainiest, wettest areas of the entire US!! we have a thick clay soil with horrible drainage problems! A wet chicken area is a stinky chicken area!!Deep litter? I don’t know how absorbent pine bark is, but I use pine shavings, pine straw, spoiled hay and straw. Those are the things available to me. Others use fallen leaves also. It has to be absorbent carbon materials and it seems to me that a combination works best. If you start to smell the ammonia, then you need more carbon. I use this in the coop and the run. In the run it will compost. If the coop has no floor, it will compost there, too. Clean out once or twice a year and spread the composted litter wherever you need fertilizer. If the coop litter isn’t composted yet, you can add it to the run or put it in a compost pile to finish.