How many chickens do you have? How do you keep adding to your flock?

What is the best products out there fordeworming and mites/lice treatment? Is this something I need to do with my babies as well once they are a bit older? (they are 4 & 5 wks now).? If so, what age? My babies came to me at 1-2 days old from local breeder
 
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-Have 6.
-Depends how many adding. Maintain 4-5 pullets/hens for family egg consumption.
-Hatch or buy chicks dependent of wants and needs.
-Will sell chicks; had poor hatch this spring so kept what popped out.
-Turn over each year here, kept 2 hens over summer and will until this spring. Sad we had to buy 5 dozen eggs, tried to stock up before selling other hens.
-Have a grow out coop for wee ones and alternate free range times until big enough to range together in separate flocks. By 16 weeks youngin' go to big girl coop with what hens are staying, if any.
-Only had one this year. Will sell or eat extras next year.
-If purchasing, I've little fear of disease with less than week old chicks and of course after I've seen their parents pens, breeders grounds.
-Mixing older and younger can add dynamics that lengthen integration time. Our production red hens wouldn't take any guff from the rooster either. 23 weeks and Nugget merely stares at him and he backs away. Reds entered his fold well enough now though.
 
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-How many do you currently have?

We currently have 38...

-How many do you add each year?

We don't add yearly unless we have culled some for an unexpected reason or to take in unwanted hens for friends...

-When people talk about hatching out chicks-are you then turning around and selling them?

Sometimes...

-When they are your "babies" are you still getting rid of them after 2 yrs?

We usually rotate at about 3 years old or if one begins having egg issues like thin shells etc. They never really get to the "our babies" stage here as we keep chickens as livestock. Yes we have favorites and the kids cuddle some and all, but when it's time it's time...
 
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I would not put new chickens in my new coop.

You don't know what they may have or carry. You need a quarantine place for new chickens that would be totally away from your new coop. You don't want to introduce something bad to your coop.If you did where would you put your younger babies?

It just pays to be safe.IMHO.
 

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