I always like to see coops in the shade....
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Ha HA Mikey! Really the 6 cats in the house are interested in the little peeper! LOL I ended up putting one of his siblins that was outside with Cotton in with Shamrock [ I am still keeping with the flower and plant names] so he has a chick to grow up with. He also doesn't peep his head off anymore.
Sometimes I think we keep chicks to hot. The chicks out side with mother are doing perfectly fine. Cotton is a good mother.
Hey anyone with silkies. Teach me a bit about color. I understand that Partridge is a wild color and it dominates the color of the chick? My Tumble weed is a Partridge. So bred to any other color hen he will sire mostly Pratridge? Cotton is white and she had two Partridge and two dark color chicks [not sure yet if black]. What will happen if Tumbleweed is bred to a buff?
My mom was just talking to me about this today! My grandmother used to raise chickens, and she would put in light early in the morning and late in the evening, in the winter, to encourage consistent egg production. She said that the winter months were darker longer/less eggs and the summer months were darker less/more eggs. Guess egg production is tied to daylight hours?
We bought three 6 week (or so) old chicks from the feed store a few weeks ago. We won't be doing that again - the chicks lived in a nice big pen at the store, but with no human interaction. These birds are wild as all get out. The bantams that we hatched, on the other hand, or really friendly. These three chicks needed something bigger than the brooder, so I finally got a grow pen built.
This is before we got the trim painted; it's all painted the same blue now and we're going to throw an accent color on it. Once the chicks have grown enough that we can integrate them with the main coop, we'll move the silkie and a couple of other chickens in there. It's mostly scrap, recycled wood, or fence pickets.
We bought three 6 week (or so) old chicks from the feed store a few weeks ago. We won't be doing that again - the chicks lived in a nice big pen at the store, but with no human interaction. These birds are wild as all get out. The bantams that we hatched, on the other hand, or really friendly. These three chicks needed something bigger than the brooder, so I finally got a grow pen built.
This is before we got the trim painted; it's all painted the same blue now and we're going to throw an accent color on it. Once the chicks have grown enough that we can integrate them with the main coop, we'll move the silkie and a couple of other chickens in there. It's mostly scrap, recycled wood, or fence pickets.
We bought three 6 week (or so) old chicks from the feed store a few weeks ago. We won't be doing that again - the chicks lived in a nice big pen at the store, but with no human interaction. These birds are wild as all get out. The bantams that we hatched, on the other hand, or really friendly. These three chicks needed something bigger than the brooder, so I finally got a grow pen built.
This is before we got the trim painted; it's all painted the same blue now and we're going to throw an accent color on it. Once the chicks have grown enough that we can integrate them with the main coop, we'll move the silkie and a couple of other chickens in there. It's mostly scrap, recycled wood, or fence pickets.
Not so simple. There are a lot of genes that come into play in determining the appearance. Partridge is not wild-type in the US (some other countries call wild-type partridge); wildtype is black breasted red, which is not a silkie variety. Partridge is based upon e^b, which is usually the most recessive base. That said, the majority of silkies are e^b based. To be partridge they also need the pattern gene. Breeding white to anything else is unpredictable; each white can be entirely different genetically; white is an OFF switch that prevents colour and patterns that are genetically present. In breeding buffs it can be difficult to keep the colour clear; breeding with a partridge adds back the smut you want removed, and lightens the partridge colouring, whcih should be vibrant, not buffish. Your best bet is to breed same colours together.