linuxusr
Songster
Hello All:
Over the years, I've been on several forums. Customarily, it's one question per post. However, I have a small bunch of beginner's questions and I thought best to deal with them at once. I think the answers will be simple for you (but not for me!)
(1) After hundreds of dollars and much sweat, not one egg! I have six pullets and two cockerels. They are all about five months of age, raised since a few weeks old. Roughly, when can I expect egg laying? Will there be any behavioral or other indications in advance that will suggest that laying is imminent? For example, I heard that the combs of the pullets will deepen in color. They are now very short and light pink . . .
(2) Aging. When does a pullet become a hen and when does a cockerel become a rooster? I'm assuming that in the case of females, it will be after the first ovulation (egg laying), but for the males I'm not sure. My alpha male is very large and aggressive, crows 24/7, tail feathers at 90 degrees. Still a cockerel?
(3) Is this what copulation looks like? The alpha male chases a hen, either grabs her neck with his beak or pecks her neck (not sure which), then mounts her. They are still for about 20 seconds, then he leaves. And, ditto, is this cockerel now a rooster? It occurs to me that if you have males and females of the same age that they do not become adults at the same age necessarily. Adulthood is established by biological development and not time per se.
(4) The word "scratch" as a noun: What is it? Any food that you throw that chickens as in "scratch" (verb), which is what chickens do when they forage? Or is it whole corn specifically?
(5) Here in the Dominican Republic I started my baby chicks on a feed of various finely ground grains. I couldn't figure out when they would transition to whole corn. But, then, they started to lose interest in their feed, which they used to eat voraciously. Now they are interested in the whole corn. Is this how it works?
(6) My chickens always have their beaks open. Is this part of their respiration?
(7) I have one hen that while she is respiring, I can hear a pretty loud gurgling sound. It must be a combination of air and liquid making this sound. What is going on here?
Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!
Over the years, I've been on several forums. Customarily, it's one question per post. However, I have a small bunch of beginner's questions and I thought best to deal with them at once. I think the answers will be simple for you (but not for me!)
(1) After hundreds of dollars and much sweat, not one egg! I have six pullets and two cockerels. They are all about five months of age, raised since a few weeks old. Roughly, when can I expect egg laying? Will there be any behavioral or other indications in advance that will suggest that laying is imminent? For example, I heard that the combs of the pullets will deepen in color. They are now very short and light pink . . .
(2) Aging. When does a pullet become a hen and when does a cockerel become a rooster? I'm assuming that in the case of females, it will be after the first ovulation (egg laying), but for the males I'm not sure. My alpha male is very large and aggressive, crows 24/7, tail feathers at 90 degrees. Still a cockerel?
(3) Is this what copulation looks like? The alpha male chases a hen, either grabs her neck with his beak or pecks her neck (not sure which), then mounts her. They are still for about 20 seconds, then he leaves. And, ditto, is this cockerel now a rooster? It occurs to me that if you have males and females of the same age that they do not become adults at the same age necessarily. Adulthood is established by biological development and not time per se.
(4) The word "scratch" as a noun: What is it? Any food that you throw that chickens as in "scratch" (verb), which is what chickens do when they forage? Or is it whole corn specifically?
(5) Here in the Dominican Republic I started my baby chicks on a feed of various finely ground grains. I couldn't figure out when they would transition to whole corn. But, then, they started to lose interest in their feed, which they used to eat voraciously. Now they are interested in the whole corn. Is this how it works?
(6) My chickens always have their beaks open. Is this part of their respiration?
(7) I have one hen that while she is respiring, I can hear a pretty loud gurgling sound. It must be a combination of air and liquid making this sound. What is going on here?
Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!