Arizona Chickens

So I am using pine bedding with the chicks.. but its messy, which is why I stopped using it w my parrot. With her, I use corn cob pellets.. the packaging lists a bunch of birds it's safe for, as well as small animals. Have any of you tried that, or know of a reason I shouldn't use it?
I have read that the corn cob bedding can have Aspergillus mold spores in it. Bad for birds. If you have a parrot read "Alex" by Irene Pepperburg. Her African Grey died of Aspergillus from corn cob bedding, sad ending to a good book. I use newspaper for my indoor birds. Baby chicks get a paper towel at first.
 
I have read that the corn cob bedding can have Aspergillus mold spores in it. Bad for birds. If you have a parrot read "Alex" by Irene Pepperburg. Her African Grey died of Aspergillus from corn cob bedding, sad ending to a good book. I use newspaper for my indoor birds. Baby chicks get a paper towel at first.
She (the parrot) tries to nest w paper or pine or paper towels.. which sounds cute, but going through $20 bags of parrot food 3 xs as fast because shes fattening up for eggs is not cool. Plus she would need extra supplements... total pain. I usually stay away from newspaper because of mites that love it. Ok, I'll keep investigating!
 
She (the parrot) tries to nest w paper or pine or paper towels.. which sounds cute, but going through $20 bags of parrot food 3 xs as fast because shes fattening up for eggs is not cool. Plus she would need extra supplements... total pain. I usually stay away from newspaper because of mites that love it. Ok, I'll keep investigating!
Yes, the African Grey will shred the paper and want to nest, I just keep putting new paper down! Never have had mites. Some folks use the wood pellets that you burn, or stall pellets the horses use, which are very absorbant. I have used peat for chicks, very absorbant and it makes good compost -- it is dusty though, I only use it outdoors.
 
Yes, the African Grey will shred the paper and want to nest, I just keep putting new paper down! Never have had mites. Some folks use the wood pellets that you burn, or stall pellets the horses use, which are very absorbant. I have used peat for chicks, very absorbant and it makes good compost -- it is dusty though, I only use it outdoors.
I will be keeping these guys indoors in my family room once they're grown. I'll look into those two pellet types. I might try the newspaper for the chicks, that would be a very easy clean up, but I wonder if itll work when they're full grown. Theyll be silkie and bantam cochins, most likely 2-3, but no more than that.

I think the two chicks I got as insurance in case of extra roos might be roos 😂they are teenie tiny, but their combs just seem like the points are more prominent and jagged, where its smooth on Minnie Mouse. I won't get anymore for now. I'll see what they all end up as and maybe pay for a nice show quality silkie later on if I'm short on pullets.
 
These are my 3 “suspected” (all but confirmed through a crow) roosters...
This is the one that we still have to catch at night
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This is the one I want to keep:
47618E98-B8F1-480E-843D-6B9E0299A7D2.jpeg

But this black one is the one we will most likely keep since the wife likes it:
4112476E-60EC-4209-85A5-8BD9E129F7A0.jpeg
 
Maybe... I’ll probably have to build another coop, run, and get more hens if I do...

Having more hen's isn't a bad thing. More hen's= more egg's!

I'm having a quiet birthday here at home today. I don't want to go anywhere today looking like a bank robber with a mask on. :gigBeside's, the restaurant I wanted my prime rib at hasn't opened back up yet.
 

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