Chickens for 10-20 years or more? Pull up a rockin' chair and lay some wisdom on us!

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Thank you all of you OTs, I have been reading your posts the past month or so, and valued the wisdom that you all have shared. I sure will put most of the tidbits into practice. Please keep it up. :thumbsup
 
I know that this is a 3 day old post but, IMHO Bee makes a very good point here! Here in my part of the south the law covers stray dogs <BG> if they are on your land and you feel that you or your critters are in any danger feel free to shot on sight. BTW, We live so far out that the cable co. will not even talk to us about a hook up.

Scott
Hides are a good idea even in a penned situation or a paddock style penning. I've seen pallets up on blocks with the soil scooped out...served as a hide and a dusting spot on hot days. My chickens will even utilize the fence line, as a cattle fence with barbed wire on top ain't so bad a wall to put your back up to when a hawk has to angle in to get you. It doesn't have to be fancy, it need merely get the job done.

I know this may sound paranoid and overly cautious but I don't even bend over my birds in the daytime and attempt to catch them. I feel that getting them used to and complacent about getting caught from above, and then nothing bad happening to them as a consequence, is asking for birds that don't know friend from foe. When I have to catch a bird, I wait until dark and lift them off the roost. It's easier for me and easier for them and they don't get used to "shadows from above" just holding them gently and putting them back down,if you know what I mean.
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One could argue that this would make them comfortable with being snatched off the roost as well, but my birds aren't in any danger of this at all....the dogs lurk outside and nothing can get past their pop door. I try to deal with the realistic dangers in my setup and leave the rest to the almighty hounds.

Having said that, I will say I lost the best dog I had last year to old age and the younger isn't aggressive towards visiting dogs like she was, so now I have to add my 16 gauge to the protection of the flock. My ol' ma put down a repetitive stray just the other day and it is sometimes necessary to do preventative measures like this...if one sees a coon lurking around the coop you usually don't wait until he has a hen in his mouth before you remove him from the picture. The dog had no ID, no one came looking for him after several days and he had the potential to clear out my flock, costing me money and wasted time and effort. He had to go.

Before I get bad posts about how we moved into the wildlife's territory and they are only doing what they are supposed to be doing, I will state emphatically that all that is hogwash. Humans have been living on this land long enough to have established their own territory and have a right to protect it just like animals in the wild do their own. I don't march down to the coon's den and steal his scraps and I don't expect him to come to mine to steal my chickens. My territory.

Same with stray dogs. If they are obviously hunting dogs/hounds I'll ask around the neighborhood and see if anyone has lost one. If they have a collar with a phone number, I'll call and try to return the dog. If they look like a stray and act like a stray, I call it a stray and I try to run it off. If it comes back we have a date with a shotgun and a biscuit. My territory.
 
That's where we live too!
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Still piping in the sunlight here so cable is only something to put across the road to keep trespassers from driving down your driveway when you are gone.

We don't get many strays here, for obvious reasons, so we have this problem seldom, but with new meaty chicks it's like ringing a dinner bell. Helpless, fat blobs all over the green grass! Come and get it!
 
i have had coons on my back porch and in my trash but so far they have left my chickens alone. the walker hound that i have guarding them is probably why. my neighbor was wiped out numerous times by coons, stray dogs, weasels and bobcat. he didn't have a dog.
 
You have a walker hound on guard but you have coons on your back porch and in your trash? Hmmm....I'm having a bit of a stretch trying to process that one.
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i have had coons on my back porch and in my trash but so far they have left my chickens alone. the walker hound that i have guarding them is probably why. my neighbor was wiped out numerous times by coons, stray dogs, weasels and bobcat. he didn't have a dog.
 
I take it the hound may be tied near the coop. I have possums that steal the cat food off my front porch but all the chicken action is in the back and side yard where the dogs roam free and they are bound to stay there by the perimeter fencing and a wireless electric system.
 
That's where we live too!
big_smile.png
Still piping in the sunlight here so cable is only something to put across the road to keep trespassers from driving down your driveway when you are gone.

We don't get many strays here, for obvious reasons, so we have this problem seldom, but with new meaty chicks it's like ringing a dinner bell. Helpless, fat blobs all over the green grass! Come and get it!


But Ohh Sooooo True
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Scott
 
Question for OTs: Show us~ or describe~ your chick brooding systems? Why do you use this system?

It's getting that season when folks are getting chicks and all the debates about brooder temps, pasty butt, etc. and I thought this question would be appropriately timed.
 
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We have weeks on end sometimes hitting 100+ here.....and it DOESN'T cool down nights, with our high humidity only 50 miles from the Gulf. Anything you can do helps.
I have even, when I'd have open freezer space, went into 'rotating buckets' mode during crisis heat, for my chickens, dogs, and rabbits. Using enough buckets, 2-5 gals for dogs and chickens, things like quart plastic ice cream containers for rabbits, to have a double set....twice a day the frozen ones went to the animals, topped off with fresh water until ice melted, the other was emptied, fresh filled, and stuck into the freezer to be ready for the next 'shift'. Not only did they have cool water to drink, they would cuddle up against them. and the ice would help cool the air immediately around the buckets.


I hadn't thought of that! I've been wondering how I'm going to keep my chickens cool this summer. I'm in south Louisiana and have weather like yours. Summer should be starting in just a few weeks around here, up into the high 80's probably in a month. Judging by the extremely mild winter we've had, I'm counting on a miserable summer.

So, you keep containers of ice rotating in your freezer to put out for drinking, wading, sitting on, etc...? What do you think about keeping a couple of waterer tops (the plastic ones that screw onto the resevoir kind) rotating in the freezer? The ones I have are not quite half a gallon each, but I have 4 total and could rotate that twice a day. As in set one out to drink as it melts and have the other two ready to go for mid-day or afternoon while refreezing the first two. I don't have a lot of freezer space either so I don't know that I could keep a lot on hand but I surely want to keep them as comfortable as possible.
 
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