Good morning!
My 24 cornish cross, and 5 broilers are now four weeks, and a day. They look good. One has leg issues, but is able to get to food. I will be watching him closely. The fermented grain is doing beautifully. I am rotating buckets so that I have a three + day supply, and the other bucket fermenting. They are starting to eat more, and I will need to add a third bucket into the rotation this week. If you think they are ravenous little monsters as babies, you should enjoy the raucous frenzy of feeding month old's. Crazy moments until they all settle. I feed the 29 birds in seven dishes spread out.
I do have a question. I am ready to move these little terrors outside! Our temps are 55-62 during the day, and mid 30's to low 40's over night. I am going to move these guys to my empty pig pen. The three sided pig house has heat lamps mounted in the ceiling. I plan to use straw bales to insulate the house, and close the open side except for a path out. That way they can stay warm. I was thinking to either put a bedding of either straw, or pine shavings on the ground in the house to insulate them from the cold ground. They have their feathers, but as is the usual, they have some bare spots. Are they old enough, big enough, and feathered enough to tolerate the temps outside? They have heat lamps in the utility trailer that they are in now, and the temp in the garage is in the 60's at night.
I have two garages. One is a 2 car garage with the trailer full of meaties, and a dog kennel with a young adult chicken I found on the side of the road. She acts like she had some kind of injury. A little off balance, quiet, slow. She eats well. Breathes well. Likes to be held. She had super long toe nails. She doesn't appear to know how to forage, or free range. I had her out in the grass. My rooster came over and danced around her a little, then attacked her. It didn't look amorous. I laid her on her back, and trimmed her nails, and a dirty dry clump on her back side. When I picked her up she was gasping. We found her in an uninhabited area, so we think she may have been tossed from a car. She has red paint rings on both legs. Sad little girl.
The other garage has another utility trailer with 8 layers, and 2 silkies. I am really ready for some of these guys to move outside.
Is it too cold out there for the meaties?
Thanks for any advice.
Karen