California - Northern

We had a wonderful time, just got home.
now back to the heat and bad air (3 forest fires near by)


Oh boy, I heard about those fires.... terrible air to breathe.... I sure know how bad that heat is down there... I have relatives down there...
do you have chickens? If so how were they when you got home?
 
Oh boy, I heard about those fires.... terrible air to breathe.... I sure know how bad that heat is down there... I have relatives down there...
do you have chickens? If so how were they when you got home?


Chickens were panting but are fine. 4 of my cockerels took turns crowing when they saw me. We have a great pet sitter who was giving them frozen water bottles 2x a day to help with heat.
 
There a characteristic to a breed, but a RIR or many other breeds will have different behavior when produced by a hatchery or a real breeder. As an example flighty birds tend to be flighty no matter how they are bred and that is certainly breed characteristic. The Shamo's I raise do not get along with other chickens but hatchery Shamo's males and females can run together. They are the same breed but mine are from Asia and they have a totally different behavior. My point was that you can't lump all breeds into one catagory of behavior.

Walt

Apparently you have just lumped a breed characteristic of Shamo's by saying they don't get along together - yet hatchery Shamo's (which I understand hatcheries cross-breed a lot of their chickens) are yet another characteristic - proves that a hatchery shouldn't call them Shamos. Pure breeds that are not meddled with by hatcheries have definite characteristics but hatcheries are cross-breeding and diminishing those characteristics out of a lot of breeds to the point they don't even qualify in the SOPs and some hatcheries will make statements to that fact. Hatcheries have crossed Speckled Sussex with Russian Orloffs, Crevecoeurs crossed with Polish, and Leghorns are being used to increase production in our old favorite dual-purpose heritage breeds. With all that cross-breeding you never know what temperament will arise from hatcheries.

There is a main characteristic for every breed established - combative, non-combative, timid, outgoing, assertive, aggressive, mannerly pet, wild temperament, flighty, flightless, mellow, etc. For example, as beautiful as they are, I would never get a 3-foot tall Malay as a pet around children because obviously it will not be trustworthy as a family pet. I would not get an ornamental long-tail or a Silkie bantam if I want to sell eggs for profit at a Farmer's Market. And I wouldn't get Egyptian Fayoumi or agile Jaerhons if I don't want birds that are known to take flight out of the yard. If I want a gentle flock it's more likely safer to pick breeds like Ameraucana, Brahma, Cochin, Polish, or Silkie, for instance, rather than Cornish, Berat, Malay, or a Longcrower. Just can't sell me on the fact that there isn't a main characteristic of every breed and the feedback received from numerous breed owner experiences have confirmed it on different breed threads.

But hey we can have fun exchanging ideas and experiences anyway.
 
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Oh boy, I heard about those fires.... terrible air to breathe.... I sure know how bad that heat is down there... I have relatives down there...
do you have chickens? If so how were they when you got home?

San Bernardino Mtns have a fire and one of the roads to Big Bear is closed. We smelled smoke yesterday but smell seems to be lifted today.
 
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Two mommas and chicks have discovered the large nesting box with curtians I put out in the run for them. Last night they stayed out in the open (inside the secure run of course). I gave broody #3 six fertile eggs from the grocery store. We'll see how that goes. I've never candled before so I'll have to do a bit of research on that.
 
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I need some help if you can.
I got shipped chicks and some have pasty butt. I didn't have cornmeal, but read the wonders of musing oatmeal with starter. I tried that and it made them worse!
They have grit too. I trimmed their butts to try to prevent the build up.
Will cornmeal really work?? And how much?
Anything else?
 
I need some help if you can.
I got shipped chicks and some have pasty butt. I didn't have cornmeal, but read the wonders of musing oatmeal with starter. I tried that and it made them worse!
They have grit too. I trimmed their butts to try to prevent the build up.
Will cornmeal really work?? And how much?
Anything else?

Probiotics in the water is what I've always heard. I had one pasty butt in my shipment of chicks and they all got water with Save a Chick and probiotics mixed in for the first week. Pasty butt cleared right up and none of the others every got it.
 
Friends up there have been cutting fire breaks like crazy. So far none of them has lost a house and they got all their horses rounded up and moved to safety.

Seems like there are fires all over the State from Southern through to Northern Calif. We're hearing and seeing fire engines all hours of the day and night. Our San Gabriel Mountains are just a couple miles behind us and we can barely see them through the smoke floating from San Bernardino.
 
I need some help if you can.
I got shipped chicks and some have pasty butt. I didn't have cornmeal, but read the wonders of musing oatmeal with starter. I tried that and it made them worse!
They have grit too. I trimmed their butts to try to prevent the build up.
Will cornmeal really work?? And how much?
Anything else?
Give them a vitamin, scrambled eggs and chick grit. Also, let them peck a bit of plain yogurt from a spoon twice a day. Do not let them eat too much though.

It is normal to have to clean the pasty butt for three days or so though. Their normal food should be a good starter too.
 

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