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- #131
- Feb 7, 2020
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Thanks, this helps a lot! I have a big cardboard box I think I could use for a little while, then I have two puppy playpens I can connect to make one big one. I did that for my dog a couple years ago when I bred her and it worked well. I'm still thinking about adult enclosures. I'm technically in a town but it's really small and no one cares what anyone does. We just don't have a huge acreage like we used to but I'm hoping to buy my own property soon. Could hog or cattle panels work to make a enclosure for them or do you think they're too short?So for the babies, I used my hall bath as the brooder for about two weeks. When they outgrew that, I put them up in my barn - I had to put some space heaters in there to keep the temperature steady, but it worked well. I used dog gates and pine shavings for an enclosure with a huge dog crate and larger hanging heater. Once they were bigger I didn't lock them in the dog crate at night. Finally I was able to move them to my neighbor's pasture and open barn with Fred, their dad. We kept the female, Ethel, in my pasture by herself. Once the babies were sold, we moved Fred back over. The adults have a lot of space, a trough of water, and I put a feeder in their three sided run-in. During winter they have fresh straw and they snuggle in there overnight. Otherwise they're pretty hardy and low key. For the record they have been laying eggs since late October but I'm collecting them this year - they are so determined to try to hatch again!
Wow, cool! How many eggs do they lay a year? Are they fertile? If you have extras for a while I'd love to maybe get a couple more if these ones are no good. I don't know what they cost, the guy just gave me these two but I'd definitely be willing to pay something for a couple. No one seems to raise them out here.