colleen4nier
Chirping
- Apr 26, 2018
- 27
- 28
- 54
So here is my question...
I have a 17 week old Cornish Cross who laid her first egg at 16 weeks + 2 days. It was fertilized by a rooster two days prior. It's a long story about the Cornish cross (accident turned pet). She is lame (had a broken leg that we fixed - she limps but can walk). And we slimmed her down - she's only about 7 1/2 pounds. She has her own coop that she shares with another Cornish cross. The other hens are kinda mean and the rooster is always trying to mount her. Every morning I take her out and put her in a large tractor with three 10 week olds. The other hens and roo free range. She is excellent with the babies. Before they were feathered out she let them snuggle with her. She sits back and lets them eat before she will eat.
Anyway, there is not a nesting box in the tractor. She can't step up to get into anything. The grass under the tractor is nice and plush (I move it every 2-3 days). Does she need a private area to lay? Should I be leaving her in her coop, by herself longer?
I like her being in the tractor, because then she is protected, but also gets the social interaction of the flock. My plan is when the babies get big enough to introduce to the rest of the flock, I will also integrate her too. I figure she'll be above the babies, but below the others in the pecking order. Plus since the others were raised with her, and she's still around - I'm hoping they will be more tolerant of her disability.
Thoughts?
I have a 17 week old Cornish Cross who laid her first egg at 16 weeks + 2 days. It was fertilized by a rooster two days prior. It's a long story about the Cornish cross (accident turned pet). She is lame (had a broken leg that we fixed - she limps but can walk). And we slimmed her down - she's only about 7 1/2 pounds. She has her own coop that she shares with another Cornish cross. The other hens are kinda mean and the rooster is always trying to mount her. Every morning I take her out and put her in a large tractor with three 10 week olds. The other hens and roo free range. She is excellent with the babies. Before they were feathered out she let them snuggle with her. She sits back and lets them eat before she will eat.
Anyway, there is not a nesting box in the tractor. She can't step up to get into anything. The grass under the tractor is nice and plush (I move it every 2-3 days). Does she need a private area to lay? Should I be leaving her in her coop, by herself longer?
I like her being in the tractor, because then she is protected, but also gets the social interaction of the flock. My plan is when the babies get big enough to introduce to the rest of the flock, I will also integrate her too. I figure she'll be above the babies, but below the others in the pecking order. Plus since the others were raised with her, and she's still around - I'm hoping they will be more tolerant of her disability.
Thoughts?