- Apr 7, 2014
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Ok, so here is the latest here.....
My neighbor has complained a couple of times about the roosters crowing. We live on almost 4 acres and are in the unincorporated county of San Diego, not the city. I have 3 bantam roos. 1 polish and 2 cochin. We are allowed to have 25 chickens including one roo is what I remember when we started keeping chickens a couple years ago. She has yelled out over the fence one time "I've about had it, that rooster needs to go into the pot". Yesterday she called to tell me "you are going to very sorry if you don't get rid of your roosters." I immediately said "are you threatening me?" She said, well no, not bodily but in other ways with making things hard for you or something to that effect. I was so mad to tell you the truth I cant remember word for word. I did not want to answer with something I would regret so I told her I would have my husband call her. He always stays calm while I tend to be like a vicious Mother protecting her young when I get riled up!![]()
So we both decided to ignore her and let her do what she needs to do. Now I am scared that the big bad chicken police are going to come to my house and count chickens. I do believe I have a few over 25 but that is counting babies. If we use Tommysgirl chicken counting methods I am under but I don't know if they will see it that way. lol I was going to say I am chicken sitting for a friend.![]()
By the way this lady is a cranky old woman that complains about a lot of things in our neighborhood. Our coop is no where near her bedroom window and they are bantams. I am going to look into the collar thing, I know Liz used it. Keep your fingers crossed for me.![]()
PS, one more thing. That night after she complained I packed the 2 bantam roos up in carriers and was going to take them to the feed store, they will re-home. This got the whole flock to clucking....they were very upset, I just couldn't do it. I actually let her bully me last year and got rid of my roo Trousers for her and I regretted doing it. The ladies really missed him. This time I will fight for my right to keep at least one roo.
Marie
Marie, I'm so sorry, that's a terrible neighbor to have! I don't have any better advice than what already has been said - I think some of the ideas are totally genius, by the way - but just wanted to see if there are any new developments on that front? My guess would be that even if she does complain, it will probably get ignored. I mean really, don't authorities have more important things to do than listen to a cranky old woman? Like rescue cats stuck in trees or something? I bet they prefer that.
I understand though, I'd have been very upset too. Hope you've calmed down and have a plan of action by now with all those great suggestions.

Howdy Team![]()
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Apologies in advance, this one is a bit 'photo heavy'.
As planned, we got the coop remodel done today. Started at 08:30am and 7 hours hours later while not quite finished, it is usable and keeping them dry, warm and safe. There are a few 'touch ups' required here and there but we were exhausted and it was time for their dinner and getting close to their bed time also!
OK, I am the first to admit that it is not pretty but it works well and I am sure they do not mind that it does not qualify for the front cover of Chicken Coops Monthly![]()
As I said, not pretty but definitely functional, I still have easy access for coop cleaning and egg collection, feeding etc.
So, what did they think at bedtime? To be expected, there was some confusion and instead of sleeping in the Chateau as per normal, Dusty bunked down with Tina and Lulu. Tina was a little reluctant to go into the Ranch but seemed happy enough once she was in there and saw her bed
Time will tell; there was, however, a definite improvement in that Cilla and LuLu were not running up and down the run as they have been of late; LuLu because she wanted to sleep with everyone, not just Tina and Cilla because she appeared to not like some of her charges too far away.
I will keep you updated on how they go
Thanks for looking![]()
I think it looks perfectly functional, which is what counts, and it sounds like the girls agree! Great job!

sad news... I checked on Wendy whose eggs are due tomorrow. a chick had already hatched, it was laid in the broody's nest so possibly had a head start. the others are not pipped yet. well, she crushed it. the chick hatched out completely, but she laid on it too hard and killed the chick. it was almost flattened into the nest. I pulled the other eggs and gave her fake ceramic eggs, the real ones are now in the hatcher.
what do I do??? how can I trust her now?? is it because she has not been sitting long enough, she doesn't know to keep her weight off them? I watched my other 2 broodies Beetlejuice and Bertha carefully hover over the chicks, lifting their bodies off them. is she just too heavy/fat? maybe if she sat the full 21 days she would be thinner. today is her day 8 or 9 I think. she was contributing to Bertha's nest for 10 days prior to sitting down solid.
I guess I am going to hatch these chicks inside. let them get a little stronger and then give them to her? how can I know that she won't kill them again?bleh![]()
Edit: she is really PANCAKED into the nest hard. and there is a lot of nesting material in her box, a few inches thick and rounded out. maybe if I removed all the nesting material she couldn't crush them. I dunno![]()
Ok, I might be a bit late with the reply and I know I am totally guessing here so take all that follows as my personal opinion only and definitely not an expert one, but I really really find it hard to believe that a hen can crush a chick, no matter how heavy/clumsy etc. Because if that was the case, you would have scrambled eggs under her by now, rather than eggs due to hatch. I don't know if you ever tried to feel under, but there is actually plenty of room because the chest gets concave when they're in that position, so a healthy chick would have found a safe place... and I think that's the key to what happened, it wasn't a healthy chick or even a live chick - it didn't get crushed to death, it got crushed when already dead, or maybe it was even dead in shell because the egg was fragile...did you see the egg shell by the way? was it broken cleanly in two, or was it crushed? was there blood? asking because the fragile egg with a hairline crack thing happened to me, and the result would be the egg breaking as the chick gets bigger - a couple days before the hatch.
Anyway, guesses aside, I gave chicks to Bonnie (a first time broody, since she was a chick herself last year) during the day and had no issues whatsoever, except for one moment of panic that they wouldn't all fit under. She was separated, in a dark-ish quiet place by herself, so I left her alone for the most part but spied on her every now and then, I doubt the fact that it was day time made a big difference.
Good luck whatever you decide!
They are so so precious!!! Here's hoping for LOTS of girls this time around.

Hey Team,
Well I'm sorry I haven't been on for ages as I have been very busy I hope everyone is well as well as there chickens & chickseveryone over here is good and guess what three weeks ago yesterday Sunshine my rhode rock hen went broody and she hatched out six cream crested legbar chicks which are auto-sexing and we have 3 hens, 2 cockerels and 1 mystery yellow fluff ball I am going to keep the two cockerels as they are going to be my new layers and breeders next year but also my uncle had put the same cream crested legbar eggs in his incubator and some other breed eggs just a day after sunshine had her eggs so last night we gave her six chicks from the incubator 4 hens, 1 black mottled Peking chick and another yellow mystery fluff ball and then what ever else hatches today we are also going to give her sunshine is such a good mummy and has taken to them straight away mhhmmm it's going to be a strange sight to see a hen with 15 odd chicks Lol I will make sure to post lots of pics also Millie's two chicks are grown up now the one with the black bobble on its head turned out to be a cockerel and the more goldfish one a hen I have now sold the cockerel to a lovely lady. But as for Muffin she turned out to be not such a good mum she hatched two chicks out and one just suddenly went missing with no traces and then the remaining chick she did have was very small and never thrived and at night the little thing would go and sleep under Maddy with her three babies but a couple of days ago the little one just went missing again with no traces and I was very unhappy I do not think I am going to let Muffin hatch any more chicks out as I don't want this to happen again
but on the other hand Maddy successfully hatched out all three of the eggs I gave her and she is a brilliant mum I will try and post pics of everyone.![]()
Take Care
P.s congrats teila on your egg from Cilla
E
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Hey stranger, good to hear all is well!

You know, that picture above looks like it was taken in my front yard, roo and hens included (well, if you mask the black on the white ones, that is) - for a moment, I couldn't understand how you got it, thought it was mine!

Oh please don't misunderstand my broodys are not being kept in shoe boxes, they are in the coop and I will section off their own small areas when hatch time arrives. Actually one of them is sectioned off now, but that is because she has a bad case of sour crop and she needs to fast for a day or so.
Well I must say so far the Brinsea mini incubator has done a very good job (shipped eggs, and 5 out of 6 have viable embryos at the 10 day mark, the non-viable had a detached air cell from shipping). That little machine turns them, allows for a programmable cool down period, keeps the humidity darn near perfect, no I don't work for Brinsea but I am impressed with it!)
And yes, I am nervous about the actual hatching part, I am sure you are right, hatching under real hens is far better than an incubator. I would bet the cheeping and mama talking is very encouraging to the littles trying to get out of the eggs. I have just never done this before and my girls have been working sooooo hard for chicks! It seems there is so much that can go wrong during the actual hatching part....but I need to trust and not over analyze (the fact I have two broodies and am still using an incubator kind of hints of over analyzing and hedging bets...lol).
Also I am not a breeder, I want a little rooster and if possible will keep all of the babies, so we won't be doing this every year.
My two cents - usually if something happens to the broody's eggs, it happens way before hatch... like when others try to get in and break an egg, etc. But the actual hatch time has always been perfect, no issues at all. Obviously your decision, but I would trust the hens.

Keep us posted, can't wait to see the babies!