- Apr 2, 2023
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You like technology?You know you're a tech geek when.....
You dig out your extra web cam and install it so you can spy on the baby chickies.
View attachment 3467766
Guess they have gone to sleep!
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You like technology?You know you're a tech geek when.....
You dig out your extra web cam and install it so you can spy on the baby chickies.
View attachment 3467766
Guess they have gone to sleep!
This is very do-able, and depending on her recovery you might just be surprised. A 4x8’ sounds good, for two chickens you wouldn’t need to move it too often either, the “coop” section of my hospital tractor is only 1 2x4 higher than the ground. I would at least double that if I were to rebuild it as I’ve had issues pulling across uneven ground, with jutting up rocks, and even tall grasses. I would also make the “chicken door” which folds down to be the ramp much taller and wider. The taller the door is the more gentle the ramp slope. I would slope the coop roof from the chicken door to the back wall *instead* and hinge the roof on the front edge. That would make my two “coop” end walls the same size for a little easier cleaning (depending on where I park it) *they are both hinged on the sides and open up.Goldie is home now. While we are confident that her leg will heal it will never be 100 percent. I thought it over and believe I will build a small chicken tractor for her and Itty-bitty. Probably 4 x 8 feet with about 30 inches closed in for a coop section. I'll put the top on hinges so in the evening we can help her get into the coop to be protected from the elements. Any ideas are appreciated. We know we can't put her with her flock but we want her to have a good quality of life.
Thanks for the update, much appreciated.@bgmathteach
So I looked into the article you linked on use of progestin and/or estrogen.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3273612/#SD1
I was trying to find the dosage, but I did notice that the experiment was on 231 white leghorns, in 4 groups. I was surprised to find the mortality rate before the termination of the experiment:
The paper did say that the increased mortality rate could be due to too big of a dosage for which they did reduce later.
- control (no treatment): 22%
- treated with progestin and estrogen: 34%
- treated with progestin only: 37%
- treated with estrogen only: 30%
Therefore I am not convinced at all that treating production birds with hormones can provide them with a better balanced health. I am afraid that while it reduced reproductive risks, it increases others. So I have decided no hormones or implants at this point.
@Ponypoor
I worked in IT for a long time first at IBM, then at Sears, I was there when the internet was 'born' in the 1990sYou like technology?
Did you have a ThinkPad? I wonder what BYC would've looked like if it existed back then.I worked in IT for a long time first at IBM, then at Sears, I was there when the internet was 'born' in the 1990s
I don't work in IT anymore though and have very little patients when fixing my devices
Tax
Good thing Lulu is quiet those darn chickens going in her stall.
View attachment 3468074
Good idea. How much do they cost?I call these guys to fix my electronics:View attachment 3468096
I used a heating pad with my chicks and it worked very well. Everyone was healthy and active, just using the cave for comfort and sleep. I raised them out in the unheated coop from day one and they used the heat cave for four weeks, then switched to sleeping in a pile on the floor until they were seven weeks old at which point that they started roosting.Other babies...
So my plans have again changed, I will not put these chicks in with the current group until they are about a week old and thriving. Which means I need another brooder plate... Or heating pad. Has anyone ever used a heating pad??? I am very nervous about using one.
If you notice, after the reduced rate, there were no deaths in 2 of the groups. Maybe someone can rustle up a more recent study...but, unfortunately, it isn't in their interest of huge commercial operations, as they want as much production as possible, so there probably are very few people/institutions willing to fund such studies.@bgmathteach
So I looked into the article you linked on use of progestin and/or estrogen.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3273612/#SD1
I was trying to find the dosage, but I did notice that the experiment was on 231 white leghorns, in 4 groups. I was surprised to find the mortality rate before the termination of the experiment:
The paper did say that the increased mortality rate could be due to too big of a dosage for which they did reduce later.
- control (no treatment): 22%
- treated with progestin and estrogen: 34%
- treated with progestin only: 37%
- treated with estrogen only: 30%
Therefore I am not convinced at all that treating production birds with hormones can provide them with a better balanced health. I am afraid that while it reduced reproductive risks, it increases others. So I have decided no hormones or implants at this point.
@Ponypoor
Nope I have a cheaply old HPDid you have a ThinkPad? I wonder what BYC would've looked like if it existed back then.
I like fixing my own devices. And when people give me old electronics that they were going to throw out, I'm even happier.
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hahahaha never gets oldI call these guys to fix my electronics:View attachment 3468096