What??
You know that one chick that starts showing itself to be of a more pleasing size and shape than all the others? If one is fortunate, they will see many of those in the yearly offerings, but usually I only see the one and a few also rans. Well....I found her...or him...whatever the case may be. With these WRs it's usually very difficult to tell until around the 4-5th mo. whether you have a girl or a guy on your hands.
I'm sure hoping this one is a girl. She's got that pleasing gravy bowl shape, great tail and heavy breast, long back and good head. I'll try to get a pic of her soon and then a pic of one of the rabble so you can see how different she is.
The garden is coming along, growing as well as it can in this second year of BTE. Put up another Jap beetle trap this morning....they've been attacking my taters, rhubarb and apple trees.
Laying is picking back up since the broody scourge I had this season, wherein I had 9 out of 13 hens go broody at one point or other. Three are currently raising or done raising their hatches and one lost her entire hatch to a black snake. The others were penned until the desire for brooding went away and two broodies disappeared into the deep green of the forest to do their brooding, ne'er to return. One was my big egg layer, so hated to see her go...but if they persist in establishing nests way outside the dog's boundaries, they will eventually get picked up by the local grey fox or coyote pack.
That's called survival...the wary and intelligent birds get to pass along their genetics and those that are not, do not. Out here, it's necessary for flock development to breed for survival instincts, so that all fits well into my free range methods.
It may seem harsh to some, but to me it makes perfect sense....I live in the middle of thousands of acres of woodland and have the only flock of chickens for miles, so I need to have some pretty savvy chickens if I want to have any at all.