prizepete
Songster
- Mar 3, 2015
- 1,618
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That is exactly it. I have two So I will try that...
oh oh oh! maybe I will borrow a friends incubator.....I have 6 AC eggs. Whatever shall I do with them . . . . ?
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That is exactly it. I have two So I will try that...
oh oh oh! maybe I will borrow a friends incubator.....I have 6 AC eggs. Whatever shall I do with them . . . . ?
Here's what I have so far.
[COLOR=0000FF]BATTLE CHICK[/COLOR] [COLOR=000000]- COMING SOON![/COLOR]
[COLOR=000000]How to play Battle Chicks[/COLOR]
Players must preregister to play. No last minute entries will be accepted. Registration is not yet open.
Players will create their own game boards to consist of a grid that is ten columns wide by ten rows down. Columns should be numbered 1 through 10. Rows should be labeled A through J.
The host will secretly arrange 5 "ships" on their own grid. These represent the location of "ships" on the "battlefield". "Ships" will range in length from 2 to 5 squares. All players will start the game with a blank grid.
The first player will pick a square at random, calling it by its column reference and row number (C3 for example). This represents their firing a "missile" directly at that square. If the host has any part of one of the "ships" positioned on this square they will call a "hit" and mark on their own battlefield which part has been it. All players will place an "X" on their own grids to show a "hit". In this instance, the current player will be allowed to take another guess. This continues until the current player misses.
A player that makes a hit earns a point. Players earn one point for each hit, weather they sink the "ship" or not.
Play continues, rotating through all players, until all "ships" have been destroyed. The player with the most points wins the game.
I have 6 AC eggs. Whatever shall I do with them . . . . ?
Sadly I noticed today that my best juvie Cemani cockerel has some feathers on his legs. I can put him in my fibro frizzled pen next year. Still disappointing though.
Those dreaded feather stubs! I was disappointed several times this year when I hatched a gorgeous, all black chick, excellent candidate for growing out...and then noticed it had feather stubsNever had that happen until my two current roosters. Needless to say, they are getting the boot from the breeding flock.