Arizona Chickens

If anyone here is thinking about joining the Easter Hatch-A-Long this year, here's the chart on when you will need to be setting them for it:

Set Chicken eggs on Saturday, March 13th at Noon (whatever time zone you are in).

Other poultry breed setting dates listed in the table below:
Type of EggDays to HatchSet Dates
Emu49 - 55February 7 to February 13
Muscovy duck35February 27
Goose28 - 32March 2 to March 6
Pheasant22 - 29March 5 to March 12
Mallard (derived) duck, goose,28March 6
Turkey, Guinea, Peafowl28March 6
Call duck and other bantam ducks26March 8
Bobwhite quail23March 11
Seramas other small bantams19 - 21March 13 to March 15
Chickens21March 13
Pigeons17 - 19March 15 to March 17
Coturnix quail18March 16
Doves14 - 16March 18 to March 20
Button quail16March 18
The quail on that list has me thinking!! What do you guys think of them handling the valley summer heat? With my daughter home, it might be a nice project for her.
 
The quail on that list has me thinking!! What do you guys think of them handling the valley summer heat? With my daughter home, it might be a nice project for her.
They handle the heat fine but need shade just like chickens. They don’t lay eggs in a nest so if you keep them in an aviary it’s a daily egg hunt.
 
Keep an eye out through this spring and summer, when people start to sell off their coops and equipment from their "covid hobby", might make things more affordable.

Oh, I hadn't thought of that! I will definitely keep watching Craigslist, thank you!

I am having a hard time giving up on the idea. :D I've taken care of friends' hens before and loved it so much. Chickens are such wonderful, hilarious, adorable creatures. I'm still poking around, looking at at scaled down or just less expensive coop ideas.

Once the coop was established my housemate would be fine with the upkeep: we calculated the costs of keeping hens vs. buying eggs and we'd either break even or come out a little ahead. Our goal is eggs from hens that are lovingly raised in healthy, happy, safe conditions, and to reduce our reliance on the stores. I have a history of pulmonary disease so we've both been in self-lockdown because of COVID and are severely limiting our trips out to grocery stores. We eat a lot of eggs and give them to our dogs, too.

The stumbling block is just the cost of a safe, sufficient coop appropriate to the whims of the desert weather and one that we can comfortably maintain (no bending, please, we are middle-aged with back issues)!

There's so much here to look at in terms of designs here. I'll keep perusing. I'm sure there's an answer for us somewhere.
 
So Elsa, the 15 week old splash cochin.. she is getting along fine w the D'uccles, they are side by side in different enclosures. They also have no problem hanging out with each other when they are out.. they are each just busy doing their own thing, but somewhat close to each other.

However... when i put Elsa in the run, she freaks out, like flapping all over, grabbing the side of the cage, just zero relaxation.. that's even if the others aren't in there. Should i just force her to stay in? Seems cruel, but i really wasn't planning on two permanent separate cages... 🙄
 
Oh, I hadn't thought of that! I will definitely keep watching Craigslist, thank you!

I am having a hard time giving up on the idea. :D I've taken care of friends' hens before and loved it so much. Chickens are such wonderful, hilarious, adorable creatures. I'm still poking around, looking at at scaled down or just less expensive coop ideas.

Once the coop was established my housemate would be fine with the upkeep: we calculated the costs of keeping hens vs. buying eggs and we'd either break even or come out a little ahead. Our goal is eggs from hens that are lovingly raised in healthy, happy, safe conditions, and to reduce our reliance on the stores. I have a history of pulmonary disease so we've both been in self-lockdown because of COVID and are severely limiting our trips out to grocery stores. We eat a lot of eggs and give them to our dogs, too.

The stumbling block is just the cost of a safe, sufficient coop appropriate to the whims of the desert weather and one that we can comfortably maintain (no bending, please, we are middle-aged with back issues)!

There's so much here to look at in terms of designs here. I'll keep perusing. I'm sure there's an answer for us somewhere.
How many chickens would you want to keep? Would they be out in the yard during the day or do you want to keep them in a run? Check Offerup also. My son found a coop for really cheap.
 
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MY FIRST EGGS!!!!! WOO-HOO!!
20210115_104700.jpg


I thought things were noisy in the coop this morning. There were two eggs. I didn't check yesterday, so one might be a day older. Since Henrietta is the oldest looking one, this may well be her work. With Big Ben showing his affection for the girls, they're probably fertile, but were quite cold when I picked them up. Like colder than if they had been in the fridge. I candled them, and both have a darker spot at the less pointy end. What do you think? I don't know how big leghorn eggs normally are. Should I be incubating these, or wait until closer to spring when I have a better setup an room for chicks?
 
MY FIRST EGGS!!!!! WOO-HOO!!
View attachment 2490649

I thought things were noisy in the coop this morning. There were two eggs. I didn't check yesterday, so one might be a day older. Since Henrietta is the oldest looking one, this may well be her work. With Big Ben showing his affection for the girls, they're probably fertile, but were quite cold when I picked them up. Like colder than if they had been in the fridge. I candled them, and both have a darker spot at the less pointy end. What do you think? I don't know how big leghorn eggs normally are. Should I be incubating these, or wait until closer to spring when I have a better setup an room for chicks?

First egg's are always exciting to get. I would wait on incubating though until the egg's are a bit bigger, so that any chick's that hatch out would be healthier.
 
First egg's are always exciting to get. I would wait on incubating though until the egg's are a bit bigger, so that any chick's that hatch out would be healthier.

Thank you! I am so excited. The world needs more cuckoo leghorns, so I plan on doing a hatch this spring. Gonna have a nice omelet tomorrow for breakfast. :)
 

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