I have two girls that do that all the time.I just went out to check for eggs and I have two girls both trying to lay in the same nest box, its only really big enough for one but they have managed to both squeeze in there.
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I have two girls that do that all the time.I just went out to check for eggs and I have two girls both trying to lay in the same nest box, its only really big enough for one but they have managed to both squeeze in there.
Turns out that one got tired of the squeeze and laid her egg in the run....and the other one didn't lay at all today.....I have two girls that do that all the time.
OHHHHH!!!! I love that idea! Can you post a link to the sport jug watering system that you referred to? THANKS!I found a 5gl watering system that was pretty neat. It used a 5gal sports jug (like those gatorade ones) and replaced the spicket with a 3 nipple watering valve. I like that the 5 gal sport jug is insulated. Water will stay cooler longer.
Thank you both so much for taking the time. I was hesitant to add anything without checking. Will continue doing what we are doing and
let mother nature handle it in her own time. I will also use the composted chicken manure when it's ready. Maybe next
summer I'll have a nice lawn. We don't plant winter grass. Thanks again.
I am not fond of grass either. I do not want to water or mow a lawn. Whole Foods introduced me to Spelt, which is an older wheat that does not require much fertilizer. My intention was to make sprouts. The flock loves them and they only take two days to grow. So I decided to grow some plus another grain called Quinoa. Quinoa is easily cooked and tastes wonderful in a salad like pilaf. In the garden it took longer to sprout but I have a spot where the seedling are over an inch high. The one problem with Quinoa is that it is a stable in developing countries and its popularity in the US and Europe is causing the prices to rise where it is grown (South America) and eaten as a everyday food. Popularity of the Avocado has caused the same problem in Mexico. The USDA needs to promote local growth of Quinoa but they will not since the USDA is owned by the international petrochemical agribusiness. Locally grown foods are good for us and Mother Earth.Personally, I do not want a lawn. To me this is a desert, so let it be what it is. But now that I have chickens I am thinking of chicken food. Planting for the girls a lawn of tender grasses that they like. Maybe dandelions, for salads and wine and the girls.