If my broody girls have taught me anything it is to just breath and step back and let them do their thing. I watch them like a hawk the first week as they tend to not to want to come off the eggs so if they go longer then 2 days I remove them so they can eat/drink and poop. After that first week they settle right into the routine and come off themselves like clockwork once a day. Then at the end a day or 2 before the chicks hatch they'll come off for that final time and whereas before they might be off for maybe 30 minutes they will take up to 2 hours before returning to the nest. This is normal and ok as I think they know the chicks are due to hatch and they will not move until that final egg has hatched.
Thanks, Rebecca. So far they have been doing everything right ~ apart from choosing the middle 2 boxes in the main coop. 🙄 It's not the safest location for chicks but it was a disaster when I tried to move them. I will wait till the chicks hatch & move everyone then.
 
The storm has passed and the rain has stopped. We got a little over 6” here so everything is very soggy and muddy except the Chicken Palace which is nice and dry (well apart from the two areas where I still need to finish my drainage pipes).
So I let the Princesses out into their yard. With the wet and the heat everything has grown a lot so Maggie’s little paths through the long grass got overgrown. She went right to work clearing the paths.


36C7AED8-B30F-408E-A4FA-1C372DC10F6E.jpeg


I am worried about Elizabeth.
She continues to lay very brittle shelled eggs and sometimes no shell at all.
At least I know she is getting the eggs out because they make a hell of a mess in the nest box. But she isn’t full of zip like normal. Nothing terrible just a bit subdued. And she just delivered a poop that was like pure water.
I will check her crop in the morning to see it is emptying properly.
I may be overly worrying - several of the Princesses have had liquid poops now and then and I think she is starting to molt, so maybe it is OK. But something tells me she isn’t quite righ.
Elizabeth and her fluffy butt.



40B8B029-F106-4449-99CF-28E2503C79FA.jpeg
789F651A-7097-4BB8-9992-E9C66AAD68A2.jpeg
 
If my broody girls have taught me anything it is to just breath and step back and let them do their thing. I watch them like a hawk the first week as they tend to not to want to come off the eggs so if they go longer then 2 days I remove them so they can eat/drink and poop. After that first week they settle right into the routine and come off themselves like clockwork once a day. Then at the end a day or 2 before the chicks hatch they'll come off for that final time and whereas before they might be off for maybe 30 minutes they will take up to 2 hours before returning to the nest. This is normal and ok as I think they know the chicks are due to hatch and they will not move until that final egg has hatched.
Not in my experience. My hen laid a clutch of eggs died because I interfered with Rockets last chance at motherhood. They died, then she broke her leg and was put down!:hit So, you are correct! Leave them alone
 
I have concluded my birds prefer spinach to red lettuce. Katydid is a salad bird. Shirina drops her salad 50% of the time. If they bite a bit while I hand out food should I poke them? Is this a bad behavior or a natural behavior?
Try a shrimp salad, with young spinach greens. I will bet that they like it! :drool And if they bite a bit, pull the food away for a while and say “No biting!” (Works for me)!
 
I’m in flight now, but have been diverted to Orange County airport, due to Fire activity in Central Valley. Things change by the second in the sky. Bakersfield airport is open, but I hate Bakersfield for so many reasons . I will update you my friends
Orange County Va?
 
Last edited:

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom