Thanks for the kind words everyone! It's been a rough day. DH has sweetly done the chores for me. I haven't been able to go out there - it still hurts so much to know I won't see Elf running around and demanding food!



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It is so hard when we lose them so young, isn't it? ((((( )))))))Thanks for the kind words everyone! It's been a rough day. DH has sweetly done the chores for me. I haven't been able to go out there - it still hurts so much to know I won't see Elf running around and demanding food!![]()
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Looks like a Rhode Island Red to me.
Thanks both of you.Looks like my own lovely Rhode Island Red roo! Mine is a very good guardian of our little flock.
sharol, That's so cute, little chick diving under the wrong mommy! I took another man's arm once during a visit to the zoo, thinking it was DH. I made some comment as I did so, when he didn't respond I looked up and a stranger was looking at me with a crooked smile on his face. So embarrassing. I'm sure chicklet felt no such shame!![]()
Danz, whew I'm glad you came along when you did!I'm really amazed that some of the birds made it that did through that storm. And it really did help to have high winds today. The geese and ducks are certainly enjoying our huge cesspool of a yard.
I did nearly have a mishap though. I went out to feed some more while ago and smelled wood smoke. I couldn't imagine any one being able to burn anything. Well I discovered the heat lamp I hung last night to try to dry some chicks in the hoop coop had gotten knocked over a few inches and sat on a roost. The roost was burned in half and the coals were igniting the straw and stuff that was on the ground. All was well except I also found that the cord to it had been knocked over to where it was laying on the metal housing and had melted on to it. Just another mm or so it would have conducted electricity and we would have had a really big problem. I'm not sure how they got it knocked over where they did but I'm glad I caught it.
I let all my baby goslings out to run today so I have to go try to gather them all up soon and put them up for the night. It's the first day the younger ones have been out.
Prairie I so understand how you are feeling. I had a goat we called Cookie because I taught her to beg for cookies like a dog would sit and bed for treats. She died trying to give birth to her first kid. It was so heartbreaking.
He's a Rhode Island Red, nice looking guy.
One of the problems with shelless eggs comes when they can't be expelled. It can cause egg binding. If the shell-less (how the heck do you spell that?) egg can't clear the canal, it can cause awful side effects. Keep a close eye on her. How old is the hen that is doing this?***snip***
I think all of the craziness may have upset one of our hens enough that she is laying shell-less eggs. I saw her drop one off of the roost last evening after we had just put them back in the silo, then my son reached in to check the egg box today and found another. I have no experience, up to this point, on shell-less eggs. I will have to read up a little and see what's up.
My husband just got back with sandbags for in front of the chicken coop door. We are going to sandbag around the door or the concrete pad of the silo coop, as we are in another flash flood watch here in Sedgwick County from Tuesday evening to Wednesday evening. I hope this will be enough to keep the water out this time. The silo flood line went clear up to the bottom of the door, which means that the water got MUCH higher after we rescued the chickens. The curious thing, is that by 1:00 p.m. the next day, all of the water had already drained out. The floor of the silo is a very sandy loam (almost just sand), so my husband thinks that's the reason it emptied so fast. I still wonder where all of that water went in that amount of time!