With the loss of my previous flock of three barred rocks, I decided I didn't want to brood chicks in the house again. I really didn't have the room and the dogs were too curious. So I got three started pullets (really expensive!)--two barred rocks and a RIR--from a hatchery with a very old and good reputation. They're healthy (15-22 weeks) and should begin laying anytime now. BUT (of course, there's always a but), I read on their packing slip that they were free-ranged. Super! I'm all for that. However, I figured it meant they free-ranged during the day and were brought in at night.
These birds are just wild! We had to cover their 12x12 pen with plant netting and close them into their coop at night. One, though, the headstrong alpha girl who was the first to poke her head out of the express mail box they came in, insists on creating and wiggling through a gap the netting before we can close her in, and roosting in a backyard tree about 30 feet up (!!). It's a big tree that partially extends over a neighbor's yard. They are not socialized at all, and I'm getting the feeling that while they were well-cared for, they were set free to roam "as nature intended," to quote Homer Simpson. They're pretty nervous and excitable, and I need to thwart that one tree dweller. She's stubborn and determined, and so am I, but I'm not sure how to improve matters.
Any suggestions?
These birds are just wild! We had to cover their 12x12 pen with plant netting and close them into their coop at night. One, though, the headstrong alpha girl who was the first to poke her head out of the express mail box they came in, insists on creating and wiggling through a gap the netting before we can close her in, and roosting in a backyard tree about 30 feet up (!!). It's a big tree that partially extends over a neighbor's yard. They are not socialized at all, and I'm getting the feeling that while they were well-cared for, they were set free to roam "as nature intended," to quote Homer Simpson. They're pretty nervous and excitable, and I need to thwart that one tree dweller. She's stubborn and determined, and so am I, but I'm not sure how to improve matters.
Any suggestions?