- Thread starter
- #211
HomesteadNowhere
Songster
Totally forgot to finish about the Bielefelder roo... I'm not certain what to do about him. I don't want mean roos but I also wasn't thinking about being another year behind if I get new Bielefelder cockerels to get the crele to come through.
At the moment I'm keeping him. We'll see with these chicks how many end up barred. I'll evaluate the hens like I said, see who isn't laying to cull out.
I'm hoping to get the pen figured out this week. Hopefully the weather settles down. I also reread over some stuff on food coloring in the vent to identify eggs. I don't know if I have food coloring but may try that too. I have multicolored zip ties that I can use to identify the hens.
This isn't what the plan was, but I'm also glad to see the FR hens doing so well. After seeing how hard it was to keep Cx going to attempt breeding from this was really easy in comparison. And now that they are almost a year old any offspring kept from them, I know these hens weren't health time bombs. Which gives me hope that people can breed from them to have a line of meaty birds that don't drop like flies and can be bred on your own.
Any FR hens found to not be laying will be dinner. Which would then show how fatty they are inside. Which is the only thing I've been kinda worried about with them.
At the moment I'm keeping him. We'll see with these chicks how many end up barred. I'll evaluate the hens like I said, see who isn't laying to cull out.
I'm hoping to get the pen figured out this week. Hopefully the weather settles down. I also reread over some stuff on food coloring in the vent to identify eggs. I don't know if I have food coloring but may try that too. I have multicolored zip ties that I can use to identify the hens.
This isn't what the plan was, but I'm also glad to see the FR hens doing so well. After seeing how hard it was to keep Cx going to attempt breeding from this was really easy in comparison. And now that they are almost a year old any offspring kept from them, I know these hens weren't health time bombs. Which gives me hope that people can breed from them to have a line of meaty birds that don't drop like flies and can be bred on your own.
Any FR hens found to not be laying will be dinner. Which would then show how fatty they are inside. Which is the only thing I've been kinda worried about with them.