Nitrous is very helpful in checking your chicken math equations!
(see the way he explains things in depth!)
"YES! And chicken math says you only have one peahen so you need to buy MORE. "MORE" may be peacocks OR peahens.
Let's do the proof:
1 peahen is NOT the same as ANY peacocks therefore peacocks MAY BE assumed to be ZERO (even if they are standing RIGHT NEXT TO THE PEAHEN, IN THE PICTURE (known to non-chicken-math people as "evidence")!)
ZERO Peacocks is NOT ENOUGH peacocks THEREFORE more must be purchased.
IF the number of birds in ONE enclosure is EQUAL TO OR LESS THAN ZERO, MORE birds must be purchased to fill the vacuum that the barnyard abhors.
The birds can be any species. Even ducks count, in chicken math. They count as 0.05 chickens, in the summer and count as NO chickens in the winter or during a buying frenzy, on an auction site. THEREFORE 20 ducks may EQUAL as much as one chicken... depending.
One hen and one rooster may be counted as high as "two" chickens btu since only one is a "layer", you *really* only have one chicken. Any offspring they have do not count. Those are chicks or babies and are never part of the math. You only bought two. They rest "just happened".
You may have as many as five full size coops that make a lot of noise, that contain only one actual chicken... technically.:YES! And chicken math says you only have one peahen so you need to buy MORE. "MORE" may be peacocks OR peahens.
Let's do the proof:
1 peahen is NOT the same as ANY peacocks therefore peacocks MAY BE assumed to be ZERO (even if they are standing RIGHT NEXT TO THE PEAHEN, IN THE PICTURE (known to non-chicken-math people as "evidence")!)
ZERO Peacocks is NOT ENOUGH peacocks THEREFORE more must be purchased.
IF the number of birds in ONE enclosure is EQUAL TO OR LESS THAN ZERO, MORE birds must be purchased to fill the vacuum that the barnyard abhors.
The birds can be any species. Even ducks count, in chicken math. They count as 0.05 chickens, in the summer and count as NO chickens in the winter or during a buying frenzy, on an auction site. THEREFORE 20 ducks may EQUAL as much as one chicken... depending.
One hen and one rooster may be counted as high as "two" chickens btu since only one is a "layer", you *really* only have one chicken. Any offspring they have do not count. Those are chicks or babies and are never part of the math. You only bought two. They rest "just happened".
You may have as many as five full size coops that make a lot of noise, that contain only one actual chicken... technically. "