Oh dear. He is adorable though. Surely someone would want him?And one of yours in the background has a lovely melodic crow.
:love
Mr P screaming good morning hahaha

I have posted him on Kijiji so hopefully someone will be interested in him.

I should say I posted Jolly, not Mr P!
 
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2 things I detest: 1) Autocorrect that thinks it knows my mind & 2) Insurance approval/denials that think they know more than my doctors
Tx ~ checking out garden bed #1 before we plant ~ always can count on the girls to loosen up the soil
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I think I will put in pole beans and tomatoes maybe some lettuce this year at the barn. Fence it off from the chooks.
 
Gosh he's soooo cute. I couldn't part with him .
Have 4 Roos the hens are sick of them.

Though last night Sir Surely decided he was going to roost in Hen House B, so of course all the older ladies had to be near him, 5 crammed onto that short higher roost in there and there was a lot of squawking. They all wanted to be next to him. Of course her just ignored them tucked his head under a wing and went to sleep hahahaha.

There I was hauling hens off the roost moving them around so it was more evened out between HH-A and HH-B. Brats!

And Mr LC is a little snot! He tries to jump the hens when they are roosting! So I made him go up on the door - he stayed there all night.

But ya, Roos are trouble when they are young.
 
I am so sorry about Jolly, I know you wanted 2 pullets. I promise you Holly is a pullet.

I do not need another cockerel. I really do not. If you were closer and the whole Canadian border crossing were not a thing....I would take him in a heartbeat. Actually I would take both Holly and Jolly, and send you home with 2 or 3 dozen silkie eggs from my flock. You could bring in some new colors and genetic diversity. Plus, Poppet eggs....well...she is a pullet producer so there is that.
Hahaha

No enabling there is there! 😊

I knew a couple weeks ago he was he, his shackle feathers started coming in and that was the clincher. Also the feathers in his tail were coming in. That’s a dead giveaway with silkie cockerels. And knew Clyde was a boy when his tail feathers came in different from Georgie’s.

But I held out hope I was wrong. Oh well. On the up side he is very attentive to stuff calls out alarms for rabbits and squirrels that get to close, even calls for strange birds flying overhead.
 
Completely 100% disagree on straw being eggcellent at moisture absorbtion.

40 yrs of having horses has told me one thing - straw sucks at absorbing and holding moister and at reducing odour. This is why I under-bed my straw bedding with softwood shavings in the horse stalls.

For bedding - something that an animal will lay on and poop on:

Best material is mixed size softwood shavings. Absolutely not toxic - hardwood shavings yes have high levels of toxic chemicals. Do not ever use hardwood shavings with animals.

Clay and sand are very good at holding moisture. To understand which is best one needs to understand the nature or soil. Clay has very fine particles which hold moisture well (this is what kitty litter is made from), sand is more course and will contain moisture but not absorb like clay. Sand drains well, but in the winter freezes like cement when it gets wet.

One other thing, once the chooks start pooping in the sand if you don’t pick poops daily the chooks will scratch around and break up the poops causing them the mix with the sand creating an organic composition that hold water and odour. Yep the same will happen with shavings, but the odour is held better in shavings, and it won’t freeze in the winter.

As far as bedding goes, soils are more used as flooring materials, though I have seen sand used in horse stalls in Egypt.

If one is wanting to have a flooring that is easily picked through for poops and such, then use course sand.

But personally I like softwood shavings - they are non toxic, highly absorbing and eggcellent at odour control.

One thing I should also point out is that I personally pick the hen house daily of all poops, that includes the roosting ledges and the floors. Takes all of 5 minutes when done daily, this goes a long way towards controlling odour and moisture.

EDIT:
- sand and other soils are very heavy especially when wet. So if you are old and decrepit like me use something that weighs less 😊👍

What experience do the rest of you have?
I love sand in the summer, i found it kept the coop dry and clean and super easy to clean out. Also great for keeping bugs at bay. In the winter it is cold though so we switch to shavings.
 

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