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Numbers are already printed on. The ink will wear off over time, but the bands are engraved so the numbers are still visible.
Where do you get them?
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Numbers are already printed on. The ink will wear off over time, but the bands are engraved so the numbers are still visible.
Amazon.Where do you get them?
I use wing bands exclusively now. For years I used colored, numbered bandettes but they kept getting lost. If I didn't replace them frequently enough, too many would be lost to know who was who. I resisted wing bands because as @aart noted, you have to handle the bird to read the number. My system for using the bandettes was to go with the same color system as used for queen bee colors. This way I could tell the age of a bird from afar. They were fairly easy to read the number from a distance. The red bands were too difficult to read the number from a distance so I substituted orange for years 3 and 9.Wonders if @ChickenCanoe is still around, he might use wing bands or have knowledge about them.
This is what we used on the farm in Hertforshire years ago but the tip was wider. It needed redoing from time to time.These got good reviews
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At least they are permanent for the bird's entire life - unlike leg bands.
This is what we used on the farm in Hertforshire years ago but the tip was wider. It needed redoing from time to time.
@3KillerBs — did you end up going with wing bands? I’m seriously contemplating it so I can keep track of the meat birds better, since I’m going to want to keep info about parents, weights at butchering age, egg laying rate, etc and was wondering what your experience has been if you went with them…
I pulled the trigger…OMG, it is so EASY! You should just do it!I haven't started using them yet.
I know I *should* but haven't pulled the trigger yet.![]()
Very true.I pulled the trigger…OMG, it is so EASY! You should just do it!
Only downside is those bands are so small, trying to move enough feathers out of the way to read them one handed (because you’re holding the chicken with the other hand) can be challenging…