Quote: City Farm Yes they are very sweet.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I might go back to fermented feed. I stopped doing it because of Eleanor having sour crop all the time due to her pendulous crop. Now that she has her bra which works really well she hasn't had any issues and I could probably put them back on fermented. I'm having issues the past few months with wild birds eating the chicken feed. They weren't an issue at all last year. They are going in through the holes in the galvanized wire mesh. Yesterday I spent over an hour lining the run with green plastic mesh because I thought it would keep them out by making the holes smaller. I underestimated their intelligence. They quickly learned to use the door on the end of the run. Now I either have to get a treadle feeder or move the feed into the coop but I don't want the wild birds to figure that out too and have a coop full of little birds. Maybe they wouldn't like the feed so much if I fermented it again.
mine is mostly mourning doves. I had a few finches actually squeeze under the bottom piece of wood of the run where there is a little gap but the doves are the pigs. the plastic hardware cloth I got was 1x1" squares. I didn't see any go through it but they'd line up along the edge of the run and slowly walk around until they found the door and then they'd stroll in. The door has to stay open because the girls free range and have to go through the run to get into the coop to the nest box and their water. My bf just informed me there was a dove in the coop the other day. Scared him to death when he opened the door. There wasn't even food in there. I'll try it out tomorrow but I may just end up feeding all the birds in the neighborhood for forever.I had a similar problem with the local sparrows, they could even go thru 1" chicken wire. I ended up lining the whole run, gates included, with shade cloth. They will probably like the fermented feed even better than the dry.
mine is mostly mourning doves. I had a few finches actually squeeze under the bottom piece of wood of the run where there is a little gap but the doves are the pigs. the plastic hardware cloth I got was 1x1" squares. I didn't see any go through it but they'd line up along the edge of the run and slowly walk around until they found the door and then they'd stroll in. The door has to stay open because the girls free range and have to go through the run to get into the coop to the nest box and their water. My bf just informed me there was a dove in the coop the other day. Scared him to death when he opened the door. There wasn't even food in there. I'll try it out tomorrow but I may just end up feeding all the birds in the neighborhood for forever.
I hope I didn't cause this broody's thing, lol...
@ City Farm, did any of your hens stop being broody once they saw the chicks?![]()
Poor chickens. I remember when I went broody. Lol. Pestered my husband to no end about wanting a baby. He eventually gave in.
I'm just glad he didn't stick me in a dog cage!

I'm aware. That's why I want to get rid of them but I can only do so much. I got rid of my regular bird feeders as soon as I got chickens over a year ago. The wild birds used to be afraid of the chickens but now they just seem to hang out with them. Onyxia was the one who would run them off but she doesn't seem to care anymore. Last resort will be a treadle feeder but I don't want to spend $45+ on one and find out it doesn't help or that not all of the chickens can use it since the chickens will vary in size so much. Right now all 4 girls are about the same size even though they're all different breeds but the new batch of chicks has an Orpington at the heavy end a silkie at the small end of the weight scale. Not sure if that will cause issue. I don't think it will as long as the silkie weighs more than a pound and can open it.I would do whatever you can to exclude the wild birds. They carry diseases and parasites that can be (will be) transmitted to your flock.
I changed my chicken food to pellets and so I put the remainder pellets near where the birds lay near their water ismine is mostly mourning doves. I had a few finches actually squeeze under the bottom piece of wood of the run where there is a little gap but the doves are the pigs. the plastic hardware cloth I got was 1x1" squares. I didn't see any go through it but they'd line up along the edge of the run and slowly walk around until they found the door and then they'd stroll in. The door has to stay open because the girls free range and have to go through the run to get into the coop to the nest box and their water. My bf just informed me there was a dove in the coop the other day. Scared him to death when he opened the door. There wasn't even food in there. I'll try it out tomorrow but I may just end up feeding all the birds in the neighborhood for forever.
my hens will pick any wild birds and try to come near the food. The second thing I did, was I had originally set them under the porch and so when I moved the feed near the water dish in the shade, it worked better thus far to keep the wild birds out.
