Greetings from Az!

DesertNuggets

In the Brooder
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Growing up here in Arizona my family always had a flock of chickens, most of which we hatched in an incubator (the anticipation and careful watching was such fun!). Now that I have a little family of my own and have finally moved to a town that allows backyard poultry, we are excited to keep our own little band of hens!

While we were planning on building a coop over the next couple of months and bringing home chicks in the late fall, we very suddenly acquired 4 hens and 5 chicks, plus a too-small kit coop. Babies are roughly 2 and 4 weeks old and in the brooder, but we are hoping to move them into their own temporary small coop soon. The 4 hens were wild free range ladies, and were a package deal with the chicks and coop. They are terribly afraid of people but on their previous property they were prolific layers--we are hoping they will relax enough to lay again soon! It's been a long time since I've owned chickens, and most of what I remember was playing with the hens, cleaning out the coop, and collecting the eggs--I'm so glad to have a community to learn from!

Our breeds are anyone's guess. The chicks are certainly a mix of mystery breeds, and the hens may be as well. Running wild on acreage with several roosters of dubious background, we haven't a clue to which blend these ladies and the nuggets are!

We are a family of four with two young children, recently moved into an urban home with a good sized backyard--we are hoping that along with our chicks, we will soon be adding a small garden and doing what homesteading we can manage on our lot. Along with the birds, our pug keeps us on our toes (she is interested in the chickens...maybe too interested). I stay home with the kids and am a modern quilter, while my husband works as a programmer.
 
Welcome! I understand about the pug. We took a break from chickens after moving to a small lot. During that time, we aquired an Australia Shephard mix that loved to chase everything.. Lizards, lazers, squirrels, etc. After moving back to the country, we bought chickens again & proceeded to train our dog. After several weeks, I gave up. (This was hard for me to admit since I had trained a golden retriever/bird dog in the past to love chickens. She would even let them scratch thru her hair & climb on her) So, I borrowed a shock collar. It took 2 good zaps to stop the attempts to chase & a couple of vibrating reminders when she looked at the chickens wrong. Now she is good as gold. I returned the borrowed shock collar & haven't had a problem since. Some people are very against training a dog with a shock collar. I would do it again & skip the hours that I spent trying to train her without it.
 
Welcome to Backyardchickens.com aka BYC! :frow
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