A good coop is one that accounts for the local weather and situation and having the henhouses in the barn is very confortable for Kelly and her chooks.
The two bigger girls have bumblefoot unfortunately. I have to agree with the advice given, please do not attempt surgery unless all other options have failed
Having dealt with bumblefoot over and over again, I followed this thread a few months ago, where a beloved rooster ended up loosing his foot to infection after home surgery, even though their owner had done it several times before successfully on other birds, and even though they had sterilised tools and foot as well as they could. A rare occurrence, but why take the risk ?
A good coop is one that accounts for the local weather and situation and having the henhouses in the barn is very confortable for Kelly and her chooks.
The two bigger girls have bumblefoot unfortunately. I have to agree with the advice given, please do not attempt surgery unless all other options have failed
Having dealt with bumblefoot over and over again, I followed this thread a few months ago, where a beloved rooster ended up loosing his foot to infection after home surgery, even though their owner had done it several times before successfully on other birds, and even though they had sterilised tools and foot as well as they could. A rare occurrence, but why take the risk ?
A good coop is one that accounts for the local weather and situation and having the henhouses in the barn is very confortable for Kelly and her chooks.
The two bigger girls have bumblefoot unfortunately. I have to agree with the advice given, please do not attempt surgery unless all other options have failed
Having dealt with bumblefoot over and over again, I followed this thread a few months ago, where a beloved rooster ended up loosing his foot to infection after home surgery, even though their owner had done it several times before successfully on other birds, and even though they had sterilised tools and foot as well as they could. A rare occurrence, but why take the risk ?
Advice and opinions needed. Issues are protein level & moving to non-medicated feed.
The new Buckeyes will be seven weeks old on Monday. Hatch Day was officially Monday June 2 according to Cackle. Though I suspect Shanai and one other are at least days older and could be leftover from the previous hatch week.
Protein:
For a couple of weeks now, since seeing somebody eat a feather, I’ve suspected the 18% protein medicated chick starter I’ve been feeding the Buckeyes has not really been enough protein for them. I wanted higher protein originally but could not find small bags of medicated starter with more. Two weeks ago I discovered Kalmbach makes a 50 lb bag of 20% medicated. In the above Kalmbach conversation the feed store chicks lady said unless you’re growing dual-purpose for meat 18% should be fine for egg producers. So that was an interesting take on it.
Do you feed for potential or not, and wouldn’t that ensure the best developmental situation for a body to produce eggs?
When I saw that chick /pullet eat a small cast-off feather two weeks ago I realized I had hardly ever seen any lying about, yet they’ve obviously changed their fluff several times. I attribute this to these guys, as Buckeyes, needing more protein. I saw lots of little cute feathers about with the Buff Orpingtons. Not here!
Could this behavior in chicks have another origin other than needing protein? Feather eating habit? I believe the last group of Buckeyes, from My Pet Chicken, left more chick feathers about, because I saved some, but I’m not sure how much. With the Buff Orpingtons there were tons of feathers.
I’ve been trying occasional protein supplementation. No-salt sardines seem to be the one they will eat. I found twice they actually don’t really like scrambled eggs. But I think proper protein needs to be a constant thing, in every meal, not a “treat”. I’d like to get a higher protein feed for them.
Non-Medicated feed:
So a non-medicated 24% game bird grower crumble is coming today. Hoping that it’s okay to mix and then switch them to it now. If they’ll eat it right off the bat, just make the switch. Is it a week too soon, or not soon enough? I did put dirt in with them after about ten days, and gave them fresh sod twice. They’ve had a dirt dust bath. That counts?
I have consciously delayed certain milestones, especially any interactions with the adults, by at least two weeks. Reasons: Hazel was actively sick (she’s fine now, her color is back and she’s back to her old self); my past experience with integrating everyone much earlier and Annie then getting so sick has made me gun-shy; and a big one is Isabel/Lizabel appears to be coming along, though slowly, but she is not quite as feathered-out as the others, & she shivers slightly when she’s dozed in my hands outside, and mainly what freaks me out is she displays this confounding “I’m-about-to-die” behaviour. I’m noticing her vision might be a little compromised in pecking accuracy.
They’ve been outside now on dirt occupied by chickens (a year ago, not currently) for a week, with nights back in the brooder inside, and last night was the first night out in their coop. The largest pullets have been more than ready, and wrangling them for transport back inside has gotten more difficult.
Since it was cold I ran power out there so they (Isabel, and maybe her small friend) could sit on a heating pad if they wanted. Everybody started out on the warmest part, and judging by the poops most moved to the cooler part, with some half-off it. The last Buckeye chicks liked to sit with just their breast on the warmth.
Advice and opinions needed. Issues are protein level & moving to non-medicated feed.
The new Buckeyes will be seven weeks old on Monday. Hatch Day was officially Monday June 2 according to Cackle. Though I suspect Shanai and one other are at least days older and could be leftover from the previous hatch week.
Protein:
For a couple of weeks now, since seeing somebody eat a feather, I’ve suspected the 18% protein medicated chick starter I’ve been feeding the Buckeyes has not really been enough protein for them. I wanted higher protein originally but could not find small bags of medicated starter with more. Two weeks ago I discovered Kalmbach makes a 50 lb bag of 20% medicated. In the above Kalmbach conversation the feed store chicks lady said unless you’re growing dual-purpose for meat 18% should be fine for egg producers. So that was an interesting take on it.
Do you feed for potential or not, and wouldn’t that ensure the best developmental situation for a body to produce eggs?
When I saw that chick /pullet eat a small cast-off feather two weeks ago I realized I had hardly ever seen any lying about, yet they’ve obviously changed their fluff several times. I attribute this to these guys, as Buckeyes, needing more protein. I saw lots of little cute feathers about with the Buff Orpingtons. Not here!
Could this behavior in chicks have another origin other than needing protein? Feather eating habit? I believe the last group of Buckeyes, from My Pet Chicken, left more chick feathers about, because I saved some, but I’m not sure how much. With the Buff Orpingtons there were tons of feathers.
I’ve been trying occasional protein supplementation. No-salt sardines seem to be the one they will eat. I found twice they actually don’t really like scrambled eggs. But I think proper protein needs to be a constant thing, in every meal, not a “treat”. I’d like to get a higher protein feed for them.
Non-Medicated feed:
So a non-medicated 24% game bird grower crumble is coming today. Hoping that it’s okay to mix and then switch them to it now. If they’ll eat it right off the bat, just make the switch. Is it a week too soon, or not soon enough? I did put dirt in with them after about ten days, and gave them fresh sod twice. They’ve had a dirt dust bath. That counts?
I have consciously delayed certain milestones, especially any interactions with the adults, by at least two weeks. Reasons: Hazel was actively sick (she’s fine now, her color is back and she’s back to her old self); my past experience with integrating everyone much earlier and Annie then getting so sick has made me gun-shy; and a big one is Isabel/Lizabel appears to be coming along, though slowly, but she is not quite as feathered-out as the others, & she shivers slightly when she’s dozed in my hands outside, and mainly what freaks me out is she displays this confounding “I’m-about-to-die” behaviour. I’m noticing her vision might be a little compromised in pecking accuracy.
They’ve been outside now on dirt occupied by chickens (a year ago, not currently) for a week, with nights back in the brooder inside, and last night was the first night out in their coop. The largest pullets have been more than ready, and wrangling them for transport back inside has gotten more difficult.
Since it was cold I ran power out there so they (Isabel, and maybe her small friend) could sit on a heating pad if they wanted. Everybody started out on the warmest part, and judging by the poops most moved to the cooler part, with some half-off it. The last Buckeye chicks liked to sit with just their breast on the warmth.
Maybe they would like strip steak?
Buy carne asada meat thin sliced, cook it yourself then using scissors, cut against the grain. Makes for the perfect steak meal for chickens.