Danz awesome news on the truck and yep who doesn't like playing with new toys 

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I'm glad that you're going to get replacements, that stinks. I had that one time I got a box full of dead chicks from a person we both know, that was awful seeing all of those little bodies in that box. Then to top that off I had to freeze them till the PO wanted to see them for my insurance claim, ugh.He is actually going to replace the chicks and do things differently. I couldn't ask for much more than that. If they don't make it this time I'll know better but he offered me a refund as a second option. Good guy. Just needs some better experience.
I have multiple nest boxes in my coop, of course I have a lot more chickens than you, but usually rule of thumb is one box for 5 hens. Mine don't use all of the boxes I have, like HEChicken said they do share but they usually have a favorite box too & get aggitated if they have to wait to get in to lay.Hey y'all, my husband and I are constructing our coop. We have less space here in Kansas and have opted for a more compact moveable coop. We only have 6 chicks. Our road block right now is that I want the laying boxes to be bigger so that the girls have room to enter, turn around however they like to lay their eggs. I would also like the sides of the boxes to extend up for privacy.
I have read that you only need one box per 2 hens.
My husband wants to fit 4 boxes along each side 11 inches apart with 2x4s so the walls aren't very high but are thick.
Any experience with hens refusing to lay in a smaller space?
Am I crazy and this is perfectly fine for a laying box? Any thoughts would be helpful! Thanks!!
Quote: Yeah I got a couple boxes of dead chicks from that person. No insurance on these. The box was in great condition. Well my last shipment of geese took way too long to get there and one baby died on the way out of 6. I just issued a refund. It's so sad even from on line pictures. So far I've shipped over 40 and that's the first loss. Not too bad I guess. But it still breaks my heart.
My bigger boxes are supposed to be here today so next week I'll try to ship some older goslings for the first time.
I'm down to just one egg a day from the geese. I got all the broodies up except one goose who is sitting in a shelter by herself. Her eggs should be about due. The other remaining three were sitting on air. They have been there for over a month! I think I'm done with letting them sit at all. It isn't productive. There are some random duck eggs in there. These geese may hatch ducklings.
@sharol I think it is dominent when you have two pairs. So I'm thinking since it exists in the jubilee and the mottle it would be. The only thing would be you might end up with a few blotches of red here and there, but watching genetics I think the red will show only on the cockerels. Don't quote me on that.
I had all these other mottle chicks that grew up without mottling ....Grrrrr. I have one of my mottled roos in the pen with these black girls. It will be interesting when they start laying. I wonder if the offspring will be mottled. They are in one of the layer coops right now anyway so it really doesn't matter. They aren't laying yet although they are huge birds. I'm going to empty my mottle breeding pen. I haven't decided yet whether to keep my handsome boy or try to sell him. If I keep him I will have to butcher one of the free range roosters.
I've been moving them to the extra incubator until they get fluffed and then to the brooder.@sharol it sounds like your hatch went pretty well, congrats! Yeah for some reason or another sometimes chicks just get to hatch & then die before they get out of the shell. Maybe they're just not strong enough to withstand hatching, it's pretty tiring for them pecking away at that shell enough to get out & then actually getting out. If you notice they just almost always sleep for awhile after that. I leave mine in the hatcher for awhile to rest & get dried & fluffed up, sometimes overnight if they just hatched before I'm heading to bed.
I still have an ongoing hatch that started yesterday, there are still stragglers left. I really hate it when they go too long because they don't tend to do as well if they do hatch at all.
Danz, I have a question for you since I know you do FF. I tried it once years ago and found it messy. I did it for a few weeks but then summer hit and it was too hot to do it outside and I didn't want it inside taking up a lot of space and making mess dripping. Then I read some more about it and realized it has to ferment for at least 4 days in order to achieve the nutritional benefits, so I decided I definitely didn't have the room to have 4 batches of it going at all times so....I gave it up.
But now I'm looking at all the whey I'm generating and it occurred to me it might be a good medium for FF. What do you think? I'm wondering if the natural ferments that are already in the whey, might speed up the process so I wouldn't have to ferment for the full 4 days in order to achieve the benefits?
I'm thinking about doing a small batch in a bucket and see what happens. Maybe just like one coffee can of grain to 4 cans of whey and see how they like it. Of course, with my gutter feeder, I also don't have a good way to serve it. I have a pipe that leads down to the feeder allowing me to fill it from the feed room and since the pellets are dry, they gravity feed down until they're gone, but usually last about halfway through the day so all the birds get a chance to go in and eat at some point. I don't think I could put the FF down that pipe without clogging it up, so feeding it will be more of a pain, but I guess I could reduce the amount I send down the pipe and put it out in a rubber pan instead. Hmmmm.....to think about.