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As they bank and circle, you can get a glimpse of both sides. takes a while and they have to turn relative to you just right.I got that - but how do I ever see the top?!
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As they bank and circle, you can get a glimpse of both sides. takes a while and they have to turn relative to you just right.I got that - but how do I ever see the top?!
I have a Beautiful Lavender Orpington Lady named "Eliza." She is one of a group of four chicks I raised up this fall. She's very curious, friendly, and follows the Dark Brahma Rooster "Artemis" around like a puppy. I found a funny sign on Amazon- The Fluffy Butt Hut, last one in is a rotten egg!Our other two residents came to us in April as chicks. My wife raised them until they moved outside and then they became my responsibility.
Hattie is our lavender orpington hen. She has not starting laying yet but i expect she will once the days turn longer.
View attachment 1633834
Jabberwockie, Jabber for short, was supposed to be an Easter Egger hen, however, he is clearly not a hen.
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He and Hattie are inseperable.
A baked (or half baked) potato cannon ont he unsuspecting brother should eliminate the salt......but he's likely to take that as a challenge.This may be more fun (especially if you can douse him when he's trying to get you)Ooh what is that, I want one. Not to go after predators, but, a certain sarcastic brother of mine who has a salt gun for shooting flies. He also likes to use it on unsuspecting sisters.
BTW: I love to buy apples/pears from the discount fresh produce area. They are inexpensive, but still good. I then hang them on a flower-pot hook in the run and they go at it - just like a cabbage tether ball. Great fun, makes them work at getting it, too.It was on this thread where someone shared the article on chopped feed, right? Well, you might remember Ester’s necropsy revealed obesity. I’ve cut out meal worms, scratch, millet and cracked corn, but still like provide something for them to hunt for while stuck in the run. I remembered the article on the chop principal, along with the fact that Dorothy and some of the others liked shredded zucchini, so I am now using a bit if this principle. Each morning, along with their mix of their lay crumble, lay pellet and starter/grower crumble, they either get:
• mash with echinacea, goldenseal, olive leaf extract, milk thistle
• some sort of cultured dairy like cottage cheese, greek yogurt or oats soaked in kefir
• grated veggies of some kind like zucchini, cabbage carrot
• kale, either chopped or full leaves
They also get a little sprouted wheat berry each morning and I’m thinking of rotating what I sprout.
They look for this each morning, and it’s fun to watch and learn who loves what. They all love the wheat berries. Flash searches out the zucchini. Cashew is CRAZY for the carrot. Bridge goes for dairy. Flash picks out zucchini. Buttercup likes to stand on the kale leaves and pull of bites. I don’t notice anyone going for purple cabbage, but it’s always gone the next day and in the morning I see healthy, but bright green poops from sone of them, so I know they’re eating the purple cabbage.
Sometimes I also treat with some fresh fruit: tomato, apple (whole or shredded), or berries. In the summer, they get some melon now and then.
It’s a fun way to still be able to give them treats, but in a way that I feel adds to their nutrition instead of detracting from it.
SORRY! MY PHONE INTERFACE GLITCHED OUT AND I COULD NOT FINISH WITHOUT POSTING AND EDITING. SOME OF YOU ALREADY SAW IT BEFORE I FINISHED.![]()
Warm. Low gets too hot.Maybe an old crockpot on low?
just like theywould from the horse troughNot sure how they would drink from ithave visions of ending up with chicken soup
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That's pretty cool. Thanks for circling them.I just found out that the egg my son dropped last week when he slipped coming back from the coop with 5 eggs was the same color. That makes The Egg Storm's 2nd egg.
Deer don't faze the chickens AT ALLView attachment 2969708View attachment 2969716
Chickens don't faze deer either (look like this year's fawns) in the foreground.
I remember when Hattie was that small.I have a Beautiful Lavender Orpington Lady named "Eliza." She is one of a group of four chicks I raised up this fall. She's very curious, friendly, and follows the Dark Brahma Rooster "Artemis" around like a puppy. I found a funny sign on Amazon- The Fluffy Butt Hut, last one in is a rotten egg!View attachment 2969758View attachment 2969760