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- #241
- Apr 27, 2007
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Esther & Winnie ~ In The Labyrinth ~The Girls Have A Sleep Over
Segregation was the word of the day(Mutually imposed)
This is where they spent the vast majority of the day.
While the big girls rested in a corner of the tractor...
The Chicks enjoyed a dust bath in the main part of the coop.
The Real test is happening now in the Coop house as the chicks spend the night with the pullets.
This new configuration has been pretty successful, in large part because it gives them all the feeling that they are not occupying the same coop even though they are.
The chicks went out in the tractor this morning and were separated from the pullets by a thin board between the main coop and the tractor.
In the Afternoon I took the chicks out of the tractor and put them in the main coop with the pullets; I went in with them to make sure everyone was behaved and in the position that I wanted them; with the chicks at the far side of the coop away from the tractor.
I wanted the pullets to go into the tractor with the chicks behind them to make it less like an invasion of the chicks space.
Once they were where I wanted them, I removed the divider and let them go where they wanted.
It was a pretty Non aggressive day, with a few minor incidences.
The pullets and chicks are by no means best of friends at this point but they are tolerating each other, at least for the moment.
The chicks were far more able to go about their chicken business today and felt much more at ease in their surroundings; they even recovered from any altercations that did arise, much more quickly.
When night came, and shortly after the pullets had gone in, the chicks followed up the ladder but stayed at the door until I physically put them inside.
Hazel was the aggressor inside the coop, at first I firmly told her to go back to her own spot, which she did, but she kept sneaking over to peck the kids; Eventually I opened the upper egg door and gave her a tap on the head and she grudgingly went back to her spot and settled in.
The night isnt over; there may be more conflict in the coop before dawn.
Tomorrow colleen will open the coop and let the big girls out, then close off the door to keep the chicks in the house until I am able to supervise them.
Segregation was the word of the day(Mutually imposed)
This is where they spent the vast majority of the day.

While the big girls rested in a corner of the tractor...

The Chicks enjoyed a dust bath in the main part of the coop.

The Real test is happening now in the Coop house as the chicks spend the night with the pullets.

This new configuration has been pretty successful, in large part because it gives them all the feeling that they are not occupying the same coop even though they are.
The chicks went out in the tractor this morning and were separated from the pullets by a thin board between the main coop and the tractor.
In the Afternoon I took the chicks out of the tractor and put them in the main coop with the pullets; I went in with them to make sure everyone was behaved and in the position that I wanted them; with the chicks at the far side of the coop away from the tractor.
I wanted the pullets to go into the tractor with the chicks behind them to make it less like an invasion of the chicks space.
Once they were where I wanted them, I removed the divider and let them go where they wanted.
It was a pretty Non aggressive day, with a few minor incidences.
The pullets and chicks are by no means best of friends at this point but they are tolerating each other, at least for the moment.
The chicks were far more able to go about their chicken business today and felt much more at ease in their surroundings; they even recovered from any altercations that did arise, much more quickly.
When night came, and shortly after the pullets had gone in, the chicks followed up the ladder but stayed at the door until I physically put them inside.
Hazel was the aggressor inside the coop, at first I firmly told her to go back to her own spot, which she did, but she kept sneaking over to peck the kids; Eventually I opened the upper egg door and gave her a tap on the head and she grudgingly went back to her spot and settled in.
The night isnt over; there may be more conflict in the coop before dawn.
Tomorrow colleen will open the coop and let the big girls out, then close off the door to keep the chicks in the house until I am able to supervise them.
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