Arizona Chickens

Good to see you here again! I hope that you find someone who will help to split your extra's.
My neighbor wants some, and I know the lady across the street want some, but her husband is against any more animals! (I am betting on her in that one). There are some hens on Craig's List, but not many and expensive. So I am not worried about them, I just thought that the people on here are the best to let know. I also ordered Brown Leghorn and White Rock for the keepers. I like the way Leghorns produce the eggs, and I wanted to see what size the Rocks get to.
 
My neighbor wants some, and I know the lady across the street want some, but her husband is against any more animals! (I am betting on her in that one). There are some hens on Craig's List, but not many and expensive. So I am not worried about them, I just thought that the people on here are the best to let know. I also ordered Brown Leghorn and White Rock for the keepers. I like the way Leghorns produce the eggs, and I wanted to see what size the Rocks get to.

Well, I hope that you will keep us updated on them as they grow.
 
Well, I hope that you will keep us updated on them as they grow.
I was planning to have a large coop, 8x24. But this winter the tree fell on it, and it is now the equipment storage. 2 smaller coops, one for summer and one for winter and/or ducks. I have been looking forward to getting some chicks, but with all the coyotes here, I decided to try the hatchery chicks first, before any special ones. My neighbor keeps hers with an electric fence wire around the outside, and she still lost a couple this winter to a dog.
 
Hey everyone.. my Minnie Mouse, who I am hoping is a girl (now 2 weeks and 4 days.. yes I am watching the second hands🤣) is changing color... I thought she would be black, but she is getting some interesting tan color on her feathers. Im more confidently thinking bantam cochin. What color do you think she might end up?
 

Attachments

  • 20200514_112503.jpg
    20200514_112503.jpg
    273.4 KB · Views: 3
  • 20200514_112454.jpg
    20200514_112454.jpg
    230.1 KB · Views: 3
  • 20200514_112438.jpg
    20200514_112438.jpg
    220.7 KB · Views: 3
  • 20200514_112436.jpg
    20200514_112436.jpg
    246.1 KB · Views: 3
Hi everyone! We are new to raising chicks and I had a few questions! We are in Phoenix and we have 3 chicks that are around 10 days old, all female (Barred Rock, Buff Orpington, White Leghorn) I feel a lot of the information I'm finding is different for here than other areas of the US.

1. I was told to keep them on Electrolytes for the first 2 months of their life but I'm seeing a lot through research they shouldn't have them for more than 10 days at a time, what is the norm for Arizona? They are inside right now except for 30 min in the early am in shade and 30 min before the sun goes down in the shade.

2. What is everyone's experience with medicated food? Should it/could it be done now? Vaccinate? Or should I treat if coccidiosis happens?

3. Should we be taking them out more during the day (shaded) since the temps have dropped a little so they can get used to the heat gradually? We plan on moving them outside at 5-6 weeks, probably 6 weeks, one of the babes is slow growing but is still thriving!

4. Last one! How does everyone do their coops? We were going to do a traditional coop with extra windows but I'm seeing a lot of open-air styles recommended for here. We live in Central Phoenix and I'm worried about monsoons with an open-air coop especially since we live across from a dirt baseball field.

Thank you everyone in advance and sorry for all the questions! I've only been to The Stock Shop and I haven't felt confident in any advice I've gotten from there except an employee correcting another that they should 100% not be outside at 2 days old🙃
 
Hi,
I live north of Phx, but essentially the same temps. I recently moved onto a property that has no established trees, but if you have any established trees, they are your best friends, better than any shade cloth. With our night time lows being 90 in the summer, you'll likely need a fan, many people use misters and you can replace some of the mist nozzles with plugs to customize how wet it gets to minimize the moister and maximize the cooling.

Open air is great, I have a winter/summer design where I take off one side of the roost and just have shade cloth on the west side in the summer. I'm considering doing the same for the north side also. The south and east are already just shade cloth for the roost. the coop is a few feet north of the house. The roost sits in a 10x10x6 dog run with hardware cloth around the bottom half and fencing and shade on the top, and more shade around half of the sides, such that it still allows air flow.

Temps can drop 30 degrees in a monsoon and you can get hypothermia, but I'd think if you have a solid roof on the roost you'd be OK.

Oh, I used to have a trampoline coop/run, and a double layer of shade cloth around the roof kept it dry!

I got a mail order batch of chicks last summer and got them too hot (although I was livng halfway to flagstaff, it still got hot in mayer area). Once I brought them inside I switched them to medicated starter because I had read that if the chicks overheat, it destroys their gut biomes. Maybe the experts can verify that or lend their experience there, but the chicks did real well.

I'll never put a shipment directly outside, I think they need to start off with stable temps and not be threatened by heat right off the bat. That batch stayed in until about 4 weeks, not because the critical temperature regulation areas like head and neck were fully feathered, but because the temps broke.

best of luck!
 
Hi everyone! We are new to raising chicks and I had a few questions! We are in Phoenix and we have 3 chicks that are around 10 days old, all female (Barred Rock, Buff Orpington, White Leghorn) I feel a lot of the information I'm finding is different for here than other areas of the US.

1. I was told to keep them on Electrolytes for the first 2 months of their life but I'm seeing a lot through research they shouldn't have them for more than 10 days at a time, what is the norm for Arizona? They are inside right now except for 30 min in the early am in shade and 30 min before the sun goes down in the shade.

3. Should we be taking them out more during the day (shaded) since the temps have dropped a little so they can get used to the heat gradually? We plan on moving them outside at 5-6 weeks, probably 6 weeks, one of the babes is slow growing but is still thriving!

4. Last one! How does everyone do their coops? We were going to do a traditional coop with extra windows but I'm seeing a lot of open-air styles recommended for here. We live in Central Phoenix and I'm worried about monsoons with an open-air coop especially since we live across from a dirt baseball field.
1 & 3) I have some new chicks now about 6 weeks old - moved them outside when they got most of their feathers and lost most of their fluff (around 3 1/2 weeks old). I still had the brooder heat plate on them outside at nite since temps were not always above 70 at that time.
I give them electrolytes when it is extremely hot and they are breathing with mouths open but only for about 4 hours then replace with fresh cool water from the house (I've read not to give electrolytes continuously). You could give them both - one fresh waterer and another waterer with electrolytes solution and let them choose.

4) My big coop is made of hardware cloth/chicken wire and roofed with a white corrugated plastic roof and then I cover the wire in heavy shade cloth that I can roll up for more sun in winter. This is all against my east and north block fence - shade & ventilation is extremely important here (I'm in Mesa). I've also had a mister in there at times for my old flock (now down to only 2 birds).

The 6 week old chicks are currently in a moveable chicken tractor with the same hardware cloth and corrugated roofing. I hang a cotton (shade cloth holds no water, cotton holds water much better) tablecloth on the west side for shade and I wet it down a few times a day when it is hot so it acts like evaporative cooling or misters. They have a little dog house attached to tractor with roost poles as a mini-coop until I can integrate the two flocks in about a month.

Good luck with your flock!
 
Hi everyone! We are new to raising chicks and I had a few questions! We are in Phoenix and we have 3 chicks that are around 10 days old, all female (Barred Rock, Buff Orpington, White Leghorn) I feel a lot of the information I'm finding is different for here than other areas of the US.

1. I was told to keep them on Electrolytes for the first 2 months of their life but I'm seeing a lot through research they shouldn't have them for more than 10 days at a time, what is the norm for Arizona? They are inside right now except for 30 min in the early am in shade and 30 min before the sun goes down in the shade.

2. What is everyone's experience with medicated food? Should it/could it be done now? Vaccinate? Or should I treat if coccidiosis happens?

3. Should we be taking them out more during the day (shaded) since the temps have dropped a little so they can get used to the heat gradually? We plan on moving them outside at 5-6 weeks, probably 6 weeks, one of the babes is slow growing but is still thriving!

4. Last one! How does everyone do their coops? We were going to do a traditional coop with extra windows but I'm seeing a lot of open-air styles recommended for here. We live in Central Phoenix and I'm worried about monsoons with an open-air coop especially since we live across from a dirt baseball field.

Thank you everyone in advance and sorry for all the questions! I've only been to The Stock Shop and I haven't felt confident in any advice I've gotten from there except an employee correcting another that they should 100% not be outside at 2 days old🙃
Hi there! Welcome to BYC and raising chickens. I only give my flock electrolytes on the hottest days and even then only a couple days a week. They always have plain water available as well. The sooner you can get them outside the better. My chicks are out at 2 or 3 days old. Deep shade and a puddle from the hose in the hot part of the day is great to help them cool off. If it's 110+ I'll also put some ice cubes in the puddles. I never gave my chicks medicated feed. Exposing them to the dirt outside will build their natural immunity so I would treat if they had issues but not feed medicated. As for an open air coop, I highly recommend it, large enough to walk inside also. I have shade screens on the front of mine for summer and even in the worst storms my flock has stayed dry. Doesn't do much for dust, but then again neither would a closed coop. Build bigger than you think you need. Good luck with your new flock!
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom