Still a lurker but enjoying all the info on the different breeds. The mailman brought me my first poultry press. All I can say is WOW so that's what chickens are suppose to look like!!!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Great posts Joseph.
This is the inside of the gray and white barn. It is 30 years old.....just repainted it so I took some pictures. The inside is 8 pens of 4 X 8 pens. They can be used for growing, mating or conditioning. I put this back door in with the idea of leaving it open on really hot days, but never used it in the 30 years. This building stays pretty cool.
Walt
And to go along with what Fred said and has been posted many times...it costs the same to feed a "heritage" bird as it does a hatchery....same amount of work to raise them too![]()
buy some quality stock to begin with....if its not the breed for you, then sell them.
Hi,
Here are pics of the 3 chicks . hatched 2-23/24-13. By Junior out of March.
This was a 1/2 sis to 1/2 bro breeding thru a common dam. Once I figure out
who is who, We will name them Pi, Ping and Pong.
http://tinyurl.com/bdrss5b
The pics show the old feed set-up before I changed it.
Best,
Karen
Waterford English Light Sussex
in western PA, US
Nah, big as those birds are, she'd need a real tractorWith the tractor in the pic it is cuter than an Orp. Get yourself a toy tractor DL.
w.
![]()
I don't have an incubator or any broody I can use either. I would love to get any breed of high quality heritage but cost is a factor.Your "want list" is a mixed bag, but you already know that.
Heritage birds often mature more slowly, but they are more likely to go broody. Heritage birds are usually known as good foragers and are friendly and often more docile than their hatchery counter parts. The hatchery grade fowl often are of mixed heritage, although they look somewhat like the breed they represent, they rarely go broody.
They will mature quickly, as a rule, and lay very, very well, depending on the breed.
Finally, I'd discount the idea that heritage birds are expensive. Honestly, they often are available at prices quite in line with hatchery grade fowl. Not all heritage birds are $50 a piece of something like that. You can often buy eggs from heritage breeders for as little as $3 an egg or much less. The feed store near here gets $3 a chick for their stuff. I dunno.
Walt, what is the floor on that barn? Is it just a pole barn on a dirt floor, or did you pour concrete?