I think the reason is she wont let him mate. I think he caught her once or twice a while ago and I checked for fertility before I set the eggs and it looked like she was fertile but apparently I was catching the tail end of her fertile streak.
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Would you cinder an Orpington heavily downed
Quote: I'm not sure. @Stephine ?
If you've already had EEs before then Ameraucana tushies should be familiar to you. Wow, you've had a lot of stress-causing events lately ~ except for losing your sweet Yorkie all the other stuff should be a positive ~ cockatiels are a hoot as pets! We rescued our cockatiel that had 2 prior owners and we had him for 8 yrs ~ we totaled his age to find that he was 23 yrs old when he finally passed!Oh shoot. I had 2 EE's and never had a problem with poo butts, but I just bought six 2 month old Americauna hens.I sure hope I didn't give myself more work than I bargained for. I just wanted some pretty colored egg layers since we lost our EE, Goldie, not long ago. And hello to everyone. I've been awol from BYC for a while. Stayed busy with the birds and bunnies and dogs and tortoise,sold my geese,lost my 16.5 year old Yorkiegirl,inherited a cockatiel and got married in Juneso alot of changes have taken place here the last few months, but it's good to be back. Now I need to figure out how to change my name on BYC
I'm looking forward to reading what everyone has been doing,and welcome MamaPenquin
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I've never been one to trim tushes, crests, wings, or eye fluff on our hens but that's just me. I have the time in retirement to take the extra time to just baby shampoo tushes or feathers and our hens seem to like the airflow from the blow dryer on their feathersMy Ameraucana that I trimmed that underdown off has been fine since. I can't see that trimming it some hurts anything. Kern
Does the chick crow?I have a beautifull buff brahma cockerel to give away - Sonoma Valley. He is 15 weeks old, docile, reserved, not approaching humans and respectful. He was a surprise roo from the hatchery. I ordered a rooster (Welsumer) when I got my chicks, so now I have two, which is one too many for us. I meant to keep both until maturity, so I could pick the better roo for our situation, but this morning I found the brahma with a feather picked tail and bleeding. I seperated him from the rest of the flock and think it might be easiest and best for the cockerel to move to a different home now.
Is anyone interested?
Hi and Welcome!Hello everyone! I am new to the website and am in the Sacramento area. My city is approving a change to our ordinance to allow backyard chickens. This show take effect in approximately 6 weeks. We will be allowed to have a maximum of 6 hens and NO roosters. I think I will make a 4x8 coop with an attached run that is 8x8 feet. This should provide 32 square feet of coop space and 64 square feet of run space. Plus, there will be 32 square feet of space under the coop which I'm guessing is where the food and water should go. I can't make the run longer or wider because between the ordinance and landlord (mother in law) I have a designated area for it to be. However, I think this space should be proficient for 6 birds (minimum 4 sq. feet per bird for coop and 10sq. feet for run). They will be able to roam the yard when supervised as well (I have dogs and not sure how tasty she will find a chicken). I'm hoping I can find some already made plans for this.
I would love to start with all 6 birds. However, my SO only wants to start with two-to see how we like them, haha. I'm hoping I can push it to closer to 3 or 4 (or 6) when the time comes. He would like 2 black australorps for egg production. I would also like to have a couple bantams. What do you consider to be good breeds to go along australorps and what would you recommend to stay away from? Also, do feed stores carry these breeds or should I try a hatchery (I was looking at Meyer-there is no minimum between January and March).
2 pullets are too few to start with unless they will be house chickens. Otherwise in our backyard situation we are allowed 5 hens but find 2 not enough, 3 leaves one man out, 4 has been our best number, and 5 are too many eggs for just two of us. 4 turned out to be our magic number in terms of cleaning a small coop or noise level from the flock........ I would love to start with all 6 birds. However, my SO only wants to start with two-to see how we like them, haha. I'm hoping I can push it to closer to 3 or 4 (or 6) when the time comes. He would like 2 black australorps for egg production. I would also like to have a couple bantams. What do you consider to be good breeds to go along australorps and what would you recommend to stay away from? Also, do feed stores carry these breeds or should I try a hatchery (I was looking at Meyer-there is no minimum between January and March).