He is very pretty and if I didn't already have one definite and possible three roosters, I'd take him. Hubby left for deployment this morning, and he knows full well he can't get rid of anything I "find" while he's gone.

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He is very pretty and if I didn't already have one definite and possible three roosters, I'd take him. Hubby left for deployment this morning, and he knows full well he can't get rid of anything I "find" while he's gone.
He is very pretty and if I didn't already have one definite and possible three roosters, I'd take him.
Hubby left for deployment this morning, and he knows full well he can't get rid of anything I "find" while he's gone.lucky him most of my acquisitions are on the cheap side.....most.
OH well. All part of the education process.Roo crowed for the first time this morning!It was a funny strangled sound but undeniably a crow! Time for him to go. My 7 year old cried even though they all knew this was coming! *sigh* Sad day.
Well, it has been quite some time since I posted anything on here, but since we started out with the six chicks in March, we had one roo that we found a home for and have five beautiful hens who are laying about five eggs a day, all brown. Chatty Cathy, barred rock, began laying earliest at 18 1/2 weeks and has only missed one day and given us a couple of double yolkers, Anne, Buff Orpington, who started laying at 21 1/2 weeks and lays pretty much every day, Jane, started laying at 21 1/2 weeks, Production Red, cross between New Hampshire and Rhode Island Red, lays a dark brown egg. Baby, Black Australorp, started laying at 20 1/2 weeks, and Catherine of Aragon, Ameraucana, started laying at 22 weeks, and lays a light brown egg...no blue or green...all healthy girls.
We have an A frame coop built by Herbert, husband of the goat cheese lady. Its been great in our Colorado Springs backyard. We are concerned with how to provide winterization for the hens so they stay nice and cozy. We have looked at lights, heat lamps, flat panel heaters, insulation, covering the coop with a piece of carpet to fit and plastic over that. We only have ventilation around the nest boxes at each end of the coop. We also think it will be good to cover one side of the a frame run with plywood and the other side with polycarbonate plastic. We don't know...what do y'all think? We check the night temps and so far the coop stays about 3 degrees warmer than the outside temperature in the roost area at night. Any ideas are appreciated.![]()