Dixie Chicks

I sat on the sidelines.
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One more thing, I took a closer look at all her pictures. Looked like the same roo and one hen, pairs used for each color variety of Orps. She maybe had 6 pairs and no more. Worse, eggs were not fertile.
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so sorry!!!!



I'll be posting lots of pictures during.. for lots of opinions.

Shipped duck eggs: let them rest for 24 hrs on the kitchen counter big end up after arrival? What do you think?
I let them sit only a few hours to 12 hours.. depending on how long they have been traveling... stuff tends to take ages to get to my house.. so the age of the egg also stresses me.

A lesson in Finnish, a most versatile but simple language:

that is insane! HOW can those two Finnish words mean all of those different things??????
 
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I really would like to do this watering system..it's what I wanted to do originally but ended up doing the bucket and nipples because it was what I had readily and easily aviable...think I'd like to install this in the new coop
 
@BriardChickens my view of a bad air cell is one that rolls around inside the shell when you rotate it... if it jiggles a lot, but stays in approx same place, then it is partially detached...


moves around, misshapen, has bubbles in it (these generally are destroyed eggs as the membrane has been broken), saddle shaped, etc.

Great info, thanks! I should have my eggs next week Thursday..
 
Now to make sure I have a broody next week too! My black Orpington seems to be going broody again, so I'll give her some golf balls to sit on next Monday.
 
@ApiaryandAviary I don't think I would use those little red crabapples in cider Lol. I have heard they are good sweet pickled and canned. There is many varieties of crab some produce big apples. Mine are a hair smaller than a golfball and yellow, yellow inside also like a Yukon gold potato. I've never heard of making straight crabapple cider but I'm sure it could be done. It is recommended to add crabapples to your mix if all you have is sweet apples to give it some sourness, tang, pizzaz to give it more balance especially if brewed to high alcohol content. Mine runs around 18%, I use good champagne yeast and add sugar. The apples I use are more 'authentic cider apples' some are sweet some are sour, a good mix. During the beginning of the US apple varieties were for making hard cider, Washington, Jefferson, days cider was the most popular alcoholic beverage, grain was to hard to come by and expensive. Nowdays apple growers and varieties are more for eating then making a good cider. Most of the old varieties have been lost. There is still some available, Orange Pippen, Greening, can't think of the others.
Northern Spy makes great cider. Have a huge one growing on the inlaws land big red tart apples.
 
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