- Mar 30, 2011
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This must be the thread I was searching for.
Good grief! I went outside and heard Esther, and she was off her nest for a bit and ate broccoli bits well. I made her some fresh water with apple cider vinegar, and she drank well. I had let her out in the yard to free-range a bit, so she could eat all the greens she wanted. There aren't any greens growing inside the run yet. Turned my back, and she was gone!
Had a very close call. She had found the old nest of year-old eggs under the house that I can't get to to remove! She had seen them and decided to brood those, instead of the new ones! I panicked... Luckily, Esther has always been my best eater, broody or not! I started wildly throwing her $25.00 crumbles around the porch and calling, "Esther, Esther, chick!, chick!, chick!..." like I did when she was a baby, and she came out from under the porch in search of the yummies! Thank goodness!!! I nabbed her and shut her back up in the coop with the new eggs.
I don't think she was off the nest too long. Always something! This chicken bit just keeps me hopping! She was so good and didn't try to peck me or anything when I carried her back to her new nest. Cute little girl she is! Easter would be so proud of her sister. What a bad scare! I'd have been sick had the new eggs been abandoned and she'd have started wasting her time on the old unfertilized eggs.
Question: Will I have to keep her in the run forever, since I can't convince anyone around here of the value of fencing in the porch so she can't get under there? For example, if her chicks hatch and I let her out to free range and she spies those eggs, is there a chance she'll go sit on them and abandon the little chicks?
Good grief! I went outside and heard Esther, and she was off her nest for a bit and ate broccoli bits well. I made her some fresh water with apple cider vinegar, and she drank well. I had let her out in the yard to free-range a bit, so she could eat all the greens she wanted. There aren't any greens growing inside the run yet. Turned my back, and she was gone!
Had a very close call. She had found the old nest of year-old eggs under the house that I can't get to to remove! She had seen them and decided to brood those, instead of the new ones! I panicked... Luckily, Esther has always been my best eater, broody or not! I started wildly throwing her $25.00 crumbles around the porch and calling, "Esther, Esther, chick!, chick!, chick!..." like I did when she was a baby, and she came out from under the porch in search of the yummies! Thank goodness!!! I nabbed her and shut her back up in the coop with the new eggs.
I don't think she was off the nest too long. Always something! This chicken bit just keeps me hopping! She was so good and didn't try to peck me or anything when I carried her back to her new nest. Cute little girl she is! Easter would be so proud of her sister. What a bad scare! I'd have been sick had the new eggs been abandoned and she'd have started wasting her time on the old unfertilized eggs.
Question: Will I have to keep her in the run forever, since I can't convince anyone around here of the value of fencing in the porch so she can't get under there? For example, if her chicks hatch and I let her out to free range and she spies those eggs, is there a chance she'll go sit on them and abandon the little chicks?