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the last few days the family room is about 85. We do have a lot of trees.Do you have lots of trees? Or great insulation?
our house heats up pretty fast here. going to try for an attic fan and some other ways to help stay cool
I don't either, and for the first time in my life I'm starting to regret it. I tried a window AC last month. It was too loud. I couldn't sleep, thus defeating the purpose of having it in the first place. I'm thinking about installing a Breeze mini-split. It's expensive (though not as expensive as central air, which my 1916 bungalow isn't built for), but if this is the new normal, I'm going to have to adapt.
I'm in an old farmhouse so let me know how that works if you go that route.
Walt
Well, I raise barnevelders exclusively, so I haven't tried all the breeds out there. I got the three ( one is not pictured) easter eggers for my daughter who " wanted something different". I enjoy the personalities of my Barnevelders.
But, of the five total EEs I've had the personalities were widely different in each bird. Of my current EEs One is super quiet, one is flighty, one is super friendly.
I live up by Redding. It gets hot here. My Barnevelders have adapted over the years mostly through selection of the better heat tolerant indivduals. Who knows what the EEs will do as hatchery birds vary so greatly by strain if you can even call them a strain as varied as they are.
Trisha
i have found that with my BCM...i have had two and they are not my favorites. One of them i named Margaret Thatcher....she had to be rehomed where she does quite well in a very large group. My present one is not mean to everyone she just does NOT like to be handled. I have a welsummer who is shy and also just fine with everyone.
Thanks all for your input/experiences!OH, and my flock is very mixed with bantams and standard....
We have 3 Wellies that are friendly and not aggressive towards the other birds. But they are down a ways in the pecking order so maybe that makes a difference. Our friendliest birds are our Pita Pinta. They are medium sized birds and great layers.Thanks all for your input/experiences!
I've never had an EE - only an Ameraucana. But my friend had Amer and EEs. And yes, the personalities of the hens are wide and varied from shy to outgoing but one thing my friend and I agreed about these birds is how non-combative and kind they are toward flockmates - they prefer to avoid conflict at all costs. Amer's are nurturing and accept orphaned chicks or injured birds into the flock where other breeds are not so willing. Even my gentle Silkies get combative toward newcomers while the Amer has a live-and-let-live temperament toward newcomers.
I was interested in the very dark egg breeds like Barnies, Wellies, Penes/Empies, and Marans - but most of these breeds are either very heavy dual purpose or else aloof wilder temperament breeds. I was told the Marans were calm so we got a pullet to try and she was the meanest chicken I've ever owned. She was 7-lbs of pure sneaky meanness and upset the entire peace of the flock so she was re-homed with another Marans flock where she continued to be unpleasant but was put in her place. The Barnies are a calm breed also but I fear like the Marans there will be the temptation of a 7 to 8-lb hen to bully smaller gentler littles in our flock. After all - they're chickens and if they can get away with it they WILL lord it over the gentles and aggressively if they choose to. The Wellies are somewhat aloof and Penes/Emps are in the Mediterranean group class so would have the tendency to be less human friendly and possibly even aggressive toward little non-combative gentles.
Many owners have LF and bantam/small breed mixed flocks with success probably because they have the space to allow the gentles to hide from the assertive breeds. In our case, we have a very small cottage yard where it is crucial for our breeds to co-exist non-combatively. After re-homing our overly-assertive Leghorns and mean Marans we have one Ameraucana, one Breda, and two Silkies left and it's been peaceful with these non-combative breeds - less birds and less LF drama! I know Sussex, Barnies, Brahma, Jersey Giant, Dorking, Autralorp, Java, and other gentle giants have basically non-combative natures but their larger size might tempt the gentlest of these giants to lord it over a 2-lb defenseless Silkie (it happened our Marans viciously attacked a 2-lb pullet Silkie and the Legs went bonkers on their flockmates) so we are heeding our past experience to avoid the beautiful Barnie and Wellie and dual purpose RIRs, NHRs, BRs, Orps, Wyans, Sexlinks, etc etc.
I can't be the only owner that's had similar experience. I love so many breeds but had to go through an elimination of temperaments and sizes to make an under-5-lb flock mix of non-combative varieties. On our 25-acre farm a flock of 50 Babcock Leghorns was easy - all one breed and lots of space - but in retirement in our little cottage backyard it is a different experience.
We have 3 Wellies that are friendly and not aggressive towards the other birds. But they are down a ways in the pecking order so maybe that makes a difference. Our friendliest birds are our Pita Pinta. They are medium sized birds and great layers.
I too had bad luck with Marans, they were mean as heck, and I got rid of them. Then I got some from Wynette's stock here on BYC, and they are nice birds. Very broody, but nice.Thanks all for your input/experiences!
I've never had an EE - only an Ameraucana. But my friend had Amer and EEs. And yes, the personalities of the hens are wide and varied from shy to outgoing but one thing my friend and I agreed about these birds is how non-combative and kind they are toward flockmates - they prefer to avoid conflict at all costs. Amer's are nurturing and accept orphaned chicks or injured birds into the flock where other breeds are not so willing. Even my gentle Silkies get combative toward newcomers while the Amer has a live-and-let-live temperament toward newcomers.
I was interested in the very dark egg breeds like Barnies, Wellies, Penes/Empies, and Marans - but most of these breeds are either very heavy dual purpose or else aloof wilder temperament breeds. I was told the Marans were calm so we got a pullet to try and she was the meanest chicken I've ever owned. She was 7-lbs of pure sneaky meanness and upset the entire peace of the flock so she was re-homed with another Marans flock where she continued to be unpleasant but was put in her place. The Barnies are a calm breed also but I fear like the Marans there will be the temptation of a 7 to 8-lb hen to bully smaller gentler littles in our flock. After all - they're chickens and if they can get away with it they WILL lord it over the gentles and aggressively if they choose to. The Wellies are somewhat aloof and Penes/Emps are in the Mediterranean group class so would have the tendency to be less human friendly and possibly even aggressive toward little non-combative gentles.
Many owners have LF and bantam/small breed mixed flocks with success probably because they have the space to allow the gentles to hide from the assertive breeds. In our case, we have a very small cottage yard where it is crucial for our breeds to co-exist non-combatively. After re-homing our overly-assertive Leghorns and mean Marans we have one Ameraucana, one Breda, and two Silkies left and it's been peaceful with these non-combative breeds - less birds and less LF drama! I know Sussex, Barnies, Brahma, Jersey Giant, Dorking, Autralorp, Java, and other gentle giants have basically non-combative natures but their larger size might tempt the gentlest of these giants to lord it over a 2-lb defenseless Silkie (it happened our Marans viciously attacked a 2-lb pullet Silkie and the Legs went bonkers on their flockmates) so we are heeding our past experience to avoid the beautiful Barnie and Wellie and dual purpose RIRs, NHRs, BRs, Orps, Wyans, Sexlinks, etc etc.
I can't be the only owner that's had similar experience. I love so many breeds but had to go through an elimination of temperaments and sizes to make an under-5-lb flock mix of non-combative varieties. On our 25-acre farm a flock of 50 Babcock Leghorns was easy - all one breed and lots of space - but in retirement in our little cottage backyard it is a different experience.