That is the theory - that birds raised over the winter are hardier than those raised other times of the year. Personally I can't really tell a difference as my chicks that hatch in spring survive winter and summer and learn to forage about the same. I have one rooster who is coming up on a year old now. He hatched December of last year and his hatch day, the high was only 24. When he was 12 days old, it got down to 3 degrees. He never even seemed to feel the cold and if anything spent LESS time staying warm under his mama than chicks I've raised in warmer times of the year. I remember the morning it was 3 degrees, and I was so nervous to check on him and see how he was but he was just bustling around, glad to see me arriving with unfrozen water for him and though I stayed and watched him for awhile, he never did go back under his mama. In the end *I* got cold and went inside. Now that he is a year old he is a really fine looking Barred Rock rooster who is filling out nicely. I couldn't say he is healthier than the others because they're all healthy, but he didn't seem to have any issues with the heat this summer, despite being a winter baby.
@TaraBellaBirds your pumpkins look gorgeous. Are they a pie variety or for jack-o-lanterns?
My garden actually fared far better than I had feared. When I went up there that morning the leaves looked wet like they had frost melting on them and I was sure by the next day they'd be dead but yesterday they were mostly looking pretty good. We lost a few leaves on the zucchini plants and that seems to be about it. DH's theory is that the grass, being on the ground did not catch any breeze, so the frost was able to settle on it, but the veggies being just that little bit taller, caught enough breeze to prevent actual frost settling on the leaves. However it happened that we escaped losing it all, I'm thrilled, since the forecast will allow for quite a bit more to ripen and harvest before the next weather danger. I have a lot of red tomatoes out there today that I need to go and pick.
I agree my Winter chicks are tough little things. Thank you, they are howden pumpkins, so they can be used for both, but most of them will lend up as jack-o-lanterns. I need someone to make me some zucchini bread, I am not a cook. I grow it but someone else has to prepare it
