California - Northern

Thanks Ron for the chick ids! I don't know how you can tell that one of the Jojos is a pullet!!! I try so hard to see the difference between them and my eyes are just not trained enough. Is it the posture that helps you determine pullet/cockerel? Of the 4 grocery chicks, I have one pullet... at least I get one girl from that bunch!

Congrats tommysgirl and Ali707 on your hatches!

Debi - those are some adorable goslings and I love that they are so personable.
I'm sorry about your pestering customer... My DH has this problem too with his home business and it drives him crazy. He has had to have the "its time for paid engineering support" conversation with some who just don't get it. It's a fine line to work when dealing with customers who you want to please because you don't want to offend them but on the other hand you need to be compensated for your time!

PetRock - your Precious is such an appropriately named hen! What a sweet mama!

Redriver - I love the video! That one beige chick is really standing her ground, don't mess with her!

Ok, now back to catching up on the last 20 pages... I'm determined!

For the Jojos it is hard because of the pea comb, but one, like Deb said, has a wider pea comb, a bit darker color and you can see wattles! There is also the stance to look at and often the size of the legs. It is easier when you have two of them together.

I of course could be wrong. It will be fun to see!
 
I've been following the day to day "in the life of California - Northern". Loving all the spring chicks and sorry for those lost, challenged and dispatched.

I want to share a story that I think everyone will find enduring, interesting and maybe educational.

From the hatch before my last hatch of fancy pancy Black Copper Marans from debs_flock and SunnyDawns eggs
love.gif
I hatched a bunch of my EE's, OE's and Polish. All of them were presold except I came up short by one chick for last order of six. There were a couple who were weak so I didn't want to let them go until I knew they would make it and one of the orders wanted more of the OE's so I let him take them, leaving me with one OE and two weaker chicks. Both of the weak chicks died and I was left with the one OE. I went back and forth on offering the lone chick to one of the families who bought the other chicks but I REALLY want an OE! She has the greatest personality and didn't make a huge fuss about being alone at night. She'd only jump out of her brooder in the evenings to come out on the deck and sit with us but was content with various stuffed animals left over from our kids to keep her happy.

I took her up every morning to socialize with the flock and she was good with them but followed me like I was her mom. Before the Marans hatched she was spending her days outside with the new BCM roo Fire Man and his two Blue Copper Marans hens and coming inside at night, still needing the light to keep her warm.

The Marans hatch was due and I hoped she would integrate with them but wasn't sure which way to send her since she was almost ready to go outside. Of course, she was huge compared to the new chicks but within a couple of days I gave her the chance with them. She seemed so happy to have company more within her age so she found her place.

Since she was a hatched chick she really doesn't have the language to talk to the chicks but as the days went on she took her role serious. When a butterfly went over she made a warning sound and the chicks seemed to take note. When the chicks went back in the brooder after their free ranging time I thought she would go back to the Marans where she had been hanging but she didn't want to be separated from them so she took the cooler end of the brooder or hopped up on the roost to cool off but she didn't want to leave them.

The last week has been so windy that the last couple of days wasn't a good time to let them out to stretch their wings so today I moved them up to the grow out pen. When I got home this evening I collected the crew, with some resistance from the baby mama...she really liked the grow out pen, but she hopped up on the basket she'd been riding on since she was a wee hatchling 6 weeks ago and I put them all back in the brooder. My husband had moved the brooder out of the garage to get his '65 Landcruiser out and I needed help putting it back so I left it without the light turned on.

When we went out to move it in the garage and plug in the light, there was this sweet 6 week old OE with 12, 2 week old Marans tucked under her little wings! When we moved it and turned the light on, little heads popped out from under her wings like she was a seasoned broody! It was truly the sweetest thing I have ever seen.
I worried about so many things with raising a lone chick but I certainly never expected her to turn out to be an incredible mom at 6 weeks!
love.gif
I'm sorry I didn't get a picture of it.
That is a great story! Thank you for Sharing it.

My oldest daughter is off to Paradise this weekend for a Wedding. I told her to say Hi to you if she saw you.
 
I've been following the day to day "in the life of California - Northern". Loving all the spring chicks and sorry for those lost, challenged and dispatched.

I want to share a story that I think everyone will find enduring, interesting and maybe educational.

From the hatch before my last hatch of fancy pancy Black Copper Marans from debs_flock and SunnyDawns eggs
love.gif
I hatched a bunch of my EE's, OE's and Polish. All of them were presold except I came up short by one chick for last order of six. There were a couple who were weak so I didn't want to let them go until I knew they would make it and one of the orders wanted more of the OE's so I let him take them, leaving me with one OE and two weaker chicks. Both of the weak chicks died and I was left with the one OE. I went back and forth on offering the lone chick to one of the families who bought the other chicks but I REALLY want an OE! She has the greatest personality and didn't make a huge fuss about being alone at night. She'd only jump out of her brooder in the evenings to come out on the deck and sit with us but was content with various stuffed animals left over from our kids to keep her happy.

I took her up every morning to socialize with the flock and she was good with them but followed me like I was her mom. Before the Marans hatched she was spending her days outside with the new BCM roo Fire Man and his two Blue Copper Marans hens and coming inside at night, still needing the light to keep her warm.

The Marans hatch was due and I hoped she would integrate with them but wasn't sure which way to send her since she was almost ready to go outside. Of course, she was huge compared to the new chicks but within a couple of days I gave her the chance with them. She seemed so happy to have company more within her age so she found her place.

Since she was a hatched chick she really doesn't have the language to talk to the chicks but as the days went on she took her role serious. When a butterfly went over she made a warning sound and the chicks seemed to take note. When the chicks went back in the brooder after their free ranging time I thought she would go back to the Marans where she had been hanging but she didn't want to be separated from them so she took the cooler end of the brooder or hopped up on the roost to cool off but she didn't want to leave them.

The last week has been so windy that the last couple of days wasn't a good time to let them out to stretch their wings so today I moved them up to the grow out pen. When I got home this evening I collected the crew, with some resistance from the baby mama...she really liked the grow out pen, but she hopped up on the basket she'd been riding on since she was a wee hatchling 6 weeks ago and I put them all back in the brooder. My husband had moved the brooder out of the garage to get his '65 Landcruiser out and I needed help putting it back so I left it without the light turned on.

When we went out to move it in the garage and plug in the light, there was this sweet 6 week old OE with 12, 2 week old Marans tucked under her little wings! When we moved it and turned the light on, little heads popped out from under her wings like she was a seasoned broody! It was truly the sweetest thing I have ever seen.
I worried about so many things with raising a lone chick but I certainly never expected her to turn out to be an incredible mom at 6 weeks!
love.gif
I'm sorry I didn't get a picture of it.
That is a great story, maybe you could write a kids book about her!
 
Ok, behavior question for one of my lowest ranking hens. I have seen her walk low with her tail fanned and her wings loose while making a clucking sound. What is she doing??? I see this when I have the chicks playing in their pen next to the big girls, but I don't watch the big girls long enough without the babies there to know if she only does it around the babies. Any ideas?
 
I've been following the day to day "in the life of California - Northern". Loving all the spring chicks and sorry for those lost, challenged and dispatched.

I want to share a story that I think everyone will find enduring, interesting and maybe educational.

From the hatch before my last hatch of fancy pancy Black Copper Marans from debs_flock and SunnyDawns eggs
love.gif
I hatched a bunch of my EE's, OE's and Polish. All of them were presold except I came up short by one chick for last order of six. There were a couple who were weak so I didn't want to let them go until I knew they would make it and one of the orders wanted more of the OE's so I let him take them, leaving me with one OE and two weaker chicks. Both of the weak chicks died and I was left with the one OE. I went back and forth on offering the lone chick to one of the families who bought the other chicks but I REALLY want an OE! She has the greatest personality and didn't make a huge fuss about being alone at night. She'd only jump out of her brooder in the evenings to come out on the deck and sit with us but was content with various stuffed animals left over from our kids to keep her happy.

I took her up every morning to socialize with the flock and she was good with them but followed me like I was her mom. Before the Marans hatched she was spending her days outside with the new BCM roo Fire Man and his two Blue Copper Marans hens and coming inside at night, still needing the light to keep her warm.

The Marans hatch was due and I hoped she would integrate with them but wasn't sure which way to send her since she was almost ready to go outside. Of course, she was huge compared to the new chicks but within a couple of days I gave her the chance with them. She seemed so happy to have company more within her age so she found her place.

Since she was a hatched chick she really doesn't have the language to talk to the chicks but as the days went on she took her role serious. When a butterfly went over she made a warning sound and the chicks seemed to take note. When the chicks went back in the brooder after their free ranging time I thought she would go back to the Marans where she had been hanging but she didn't want to be separated from them so she took the cooler end of the brooder or hopped up on the roost to cool off but she didn't want to leave them.

The last week has been so windy that the last couple of days wasn't a good time to let them out to stretch their wings so today I moved them up to the grow out pen. When I got home this evening I collected the crew, with some resistance from the baby mama...she really liked the grow out pen, but she hopped up on the basket she'd been riding on since she was a wee hatchling 6 weeks ago and I put them all back in the brooder. My husband had moved the brooder out of the garage to get his '65 Landcruiser out and I needed help putting it back so I left it without the light turned on.

When we went out to move it in the garage and plug in the light, there was this sweet 6 week old OE with 12, 2 week old Marans tucked under her little wings! When we moved it and turned the light on, little heads popped out from under her wings like she was a seasoned broody! It was truly the sweetest thing I have ever seen.
I worried about so many things with raising a lone chick but I certainly never expected her to turn out to be an incredible mom at 6 weeks!
love.gif
I'm sorry I didn't get a picture of it.

Agree, thanks so much for sharing! Its a very sweet thing to picture.

I got six for six today or maybe i should say seven for six. Another egg in an egg but this time the outer egg was membrane and albumen only, no shell. Inside egg was perfect. Don't know who laid it. Probably Della but her vent looked normal. Last time she was swollen and bruised. Weird eggs r us!
 
Quote: My experience is, you've done what you can to correct what might be a chick that was malpositioned or took a little too long to hatch and needed some help getting things straightened out. At this point I decide if I want to care for a chicken with special needs (which is way more then caring for a chick with special needs...I know because I have) or if I'm going to hatch, if this could be passed on. It's your call.
Well, they will eat a lot at first, and it will just go through them. No real worries. They will settle down about it after a while.

I have never had a stinky problem with pine shavings. Ever. I just keep adding more; I don't even need to take any out (unless it got wet by the waterer) until the chicks are done brooding. Then I dump the whole thing into the compost heap.
I haven't either....I love pine shavings. I do remove the ones around the waterer if they get wet and if it's a lot of chicks I remove some, throw in some fresh. And I also have them in my livingroom for the first week. I thinks it's the best way to troubleshoot early issues.
I usually keep all my babies indoors for a week, then out they go to a shed/garage brooder. I can't even tell you how many chicks that is at the moment......................WAY too many.
I cannot imagine!!!!
bow.gif
But I too believe it's the best way to know whats going on in your hatches.
Quote: Oh please tell her to stop by if she gets the chance! We're right in the downtown, big Lodgepole building with green metal roofing. I hope she can take the time but know how limited time can be when you're traveling with mission.
Quote: I thought about that when I saw her with her wings around those little ones, just a few weeks younger then her. I'm an artist too and I've always wanted to illustrate a children's book. Even if just for my grandkids.
 
Oh, and Ron, if your daughter wants to be on TV, the channel 12, Wake Up crew are doing a story on my Wine Room at noon tomorrow. I need a bar full....if she's 21! It'll air next week.
 
Good morning! I had a soft shelled egg this morning but I think I know what is going on I hope you all can tell me if I make sense. Della is my least productive layer but she is also the egg in the egg layer x2 now I think. There have been multiple times when, if you counted eggs per chicken it came out 7 or even 8 for 6 in a 24 hour period but the extras and were membrane only eggs. I think that Della doesn't ovulate regularly and when she does ovulate she sometime releases more than one now she has enough calcium in her system that one of those eggs will be hard shelled but the others will not. Does that sound right?
My experience is, you've done what you can to correct what might be a chick that was malpositioned or took a little too long to hatch and needed some help getting things straightened out. At this point I decide if I want to care for a chicken with special needs (which is way more then caring for a chick with special needs...I know because I have) or if I'm going to hatch, if this could be passed on. It's your call.
Really? I am curious what it would entail beyond what it has already. I have no experience but was thinking that if she can get water and food and hold her own as a chick wouldn't she be OK as an adult, Am I being naive? She would not be a part of a breeding program even if she didn't walk funny. She cam from my uncle's BO who was covered by a Golden Comet roo.
 
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