Dixie Chicks

I know we talked about it on other threads but I'm more and more becoming a fan of the all natural chicken keeping. The thread BeeKissed started is a look at how it's done. After raising chicks in a brooder the first go around and this time raising them more or less on there own with a heat lamp only on really cold nights, the ones that were out side with only occasional heat have been more healthy and seem to be stronger birds. Also I have taken on a survival of the fittest mentality. If they are weak and haveing issues they get culled quickly.

Yes I'm leaning toward this too... Cunuckbok... Whatever Tara's user name is had a killer post in TOFH about it... And beekissed has had some great posts about the subject too, and others. Though in light of the worm in the egg thing I really want to worm... But my birds have no symptoms of worms so I probably won't...

Why the H did my kid get up at 5:30...

Does any one else think the flaming wheelbarrow was a great way to warm up a pool?

I think you're supposed to avoid putting meat and dairy in the compost unless it's a hot compost, because of pathogens. I'm not really worried about it though my great-grandmother used to use people poop fresh from the out house in her garden and she can kill anybody with it...
 
Sam, that hot tub would work very well. It's just a bit of a hillbilly way of doing it.

Here's a slightly refined version.

Yeah, cooking the compost is a good idea if you throw that kind of stuff in. But I don't see much issues in composting meat otherwise, sick animals I might avoid, but other than that, no problem. And dairy goes in there too. People poop I might compost a bit longer though. It smells so bad otherwise.
 
The only problem I ran into past -20C was freezing wattles and combs on the roosters. I think their combs touched the metal feeder and wattles hung into the water. No problems with the girls.
 
BC, I think they'll freeze at those temps even without touching anything, at least Eemeli's did. Optimally I'd like a small combed roo for next winter. Eemeli is going to lose his tips from his comb. They didn't freeze badly, but a bit.
 
My frost bite issues didn't hit until -30C... I bet if I had proper ventilation and a nipple water so the big BO hadn't got his wattles in the water, my birds would be frostbite free still... first winter in three I've had frostbite I mainly blame having heated water buckets in the coop, I never had heated waters before this winter and it hit -30 and lower all 3 years....
 
Eemeli got his tips frozen out in the run at -20C. But he has a pretty large comb with thin points, so I think it was inevitable. The tissue doesn't look completely dead though, so it might still heal.
 

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