I need to vent

Hello Appalachickens

I too live by the same motto and thank you I seem to be doing much better.

I am going with a hoop coop design from Cotton River Farms. Mine however will be stationary and it will be a coop/run combo with the girls allowed to free range outside
in a fenced off area that coop will sit in. I know given time the coop will go from grass to sand as the girls do their chicken thing and tear up the ground.

At some point the floor will need to be dealt with and just sand in my opinion is not appealing. It might work for people with a wood floor and sand over that but sand by its self isn't going to absorb the evenings left overs. So far I am liking what I am reading about horse pellets. It is holding first place at the moment of what I may use.

Stay clucky!
My understanding, just from what I read here, is sand requires daily cleaning, kitty litter box style. More power to people who don’t mind doing that, but not for me. I think the horse pellets are a good idea and after my first clean out sometime next year, I’ll probably do just horse pelts since hemp is so darn expensive!
 
I'm happy to say the frustrating part is over now hopefully I will have my chicks by next week and I can join the ranks of chicken moms and dads.

Also To lazy farmer. thanks for your reply. I have my permitting O.C. is a tough nut to crack if you challenge them. If you want to appeal a ruling it cost you in the neighborhood of $250.00 +.

You have to pay upfront and if they say no they got you and your money. Playing odds against the house in this case O.C.is like gambling in Vegas. The house is stacked against you. your better off letting sleeping dogs lie and stay under the radar.

Any way glad your able to do what your doing and enjoying your Girls.
Stay clucky
 
Hi Silkie mom:
Thank you for your input I had heard of it but knew nothing about it so I went and YouTubed it and I like what I was watching. is the pellet you are using Hemp, Pine, Aspen? was wondering if all horse bedding is created equal?
Horse bedding pellets are 100% pine.
 
I'm happy to say the frustrating part is over now hopefully I will have my chicks by next week and I can join the ranks of chicken moms and dads.

Also To lazy farmer. thanks for your reply. I have my permitting O.C. is a tough nut to crack if you challenge them. If you want to appeal a ruling it cost you in the neighborhood of $250.00 +.

You have to pay upfront and if they say no they got you and your money. Playing odds against the house in this case O.C.is like gambling in Vegas. The house is stacked against you. your better off letting sleeping dogs lie and stay under the radar.

Any way glad your able to do what your doing and enjoying your Girls.
Stay clucky
Hello BigBird!
I just logged in, had a notification for this thread, and saw you should be getting your chicks soon! :) I just received mine, they are even more fun and adorable than I imagined. What did you all decide on, besides the two polish?
 
Hello FlufferChick:
I cant tell you yet its a BIG secret.:eek:

Actually it's not, we haven't picked them up yet as we were working on building the coop this week while my son was in town and helped me do a lot of stuff I am not able to do anymore, plus the Florida heat is murderous right now with the heat index up to 110.

I am leaning toward road island red and bard rock as i understand they can tolerate the heat so much better other wise I would have gotten Orpington's.

The hoop coop is erected and all I need to finish up is wire tying the hardware cloth to the cattle fencing in several places through out the middle of the frame work. Then just add the tarp.

Oh ya need to finish up the nesting box, but for all intense and purposes were just about there.
 
Hello FlufferChick:
I cant tell you yet its a BIG secret.:eek:

Actually it's not, we haven't picked them up yet as we were working on building the coop this week while my son was in town and helped me do a lot of stuff I am not able to do anymore, plus the Florida heat is murderous right now with the heat index up to 110.

I am leaning toward road island red and bard rock as i understand they can tolerate the heat so much better other wise I would have gotten Orpington's.

The hoop coop is erected and all I need to finish up is wire tying the hardware cloth to the cattle fencing in several places through out the middle of the frame work. Then just add the tarp.

Oh ya need to finish up the nesting box, but for all intense and purposes were just about there.
Oh I originally wanted fluffy sweet orphingtons too, but decided against them for the same reason. Just too darn hot in Florida! But those RIRs and barred would give you lots of eggs, big ones too :)
I’m glad you’re almost done, especially with this crazy heat.
And ya, my nesting boxes are a pile of wood in my garage still too. But we are a ways out from needing those anyways haha.
 
Clucky Monday FlufferChick.

So I got a question that I know you can help me with I hope.:fl

This is probably going to sound ridiculous I am finding myself hesitant to picking up my baby chicks and bringing them home.:barnie

My question is: Being that you are also in Florida and dealing with this heat, where are you keeping your brooder and how are your babies doing with this insane heat. I have two places to keep my brooder My shop or the garage. I know the C.O.E (Chief Of Everything) of our house would prefer the shop over the garage but the shop is in the high 90's pushing 100F at times I can open the windows but it wont help much. Being a first time chicken dad I don't want to stress them out or worse.

I know first few day old chicks need Hi heat in the brooder but the selection at the store are now older and I am not sure how to proceed. Do I still need the heat lamp and let them self regulate or is the current temps in the shop/garage enough.

I would like to get my girls this week as they will be fully feathered by October and the coop will be done ready for them to move in since October stays fairly warm here in the south.

Any thoughts- suggestions- ideas- hand holding would greatly be appreciated:bow

The C.O.E. says "Hand holding in this instance is acceptable":yesss:
To other readers your input would also be welcome. Thank you in advance.
Stay clucky everyone.
BB.
 
Clucky Monday FlufferChick.

So I got a question that I know you can help me with I hope.:fl

This is probably going to sound ridiculous I am finding myself hesitant to picking up my baby chicks and bringing them home.:barnie

My question is: Being that you are also in Florida and dealing with this heat, where are you keeping your brooder and how are your babies doing with this insane heat. I have two places to keep my brooder My shop or the garage. I know the C.O.E (Chief Of Everything) of our house would prefer the shop over the garage but the shop is in the high 90's pushing 100F at times I can open the windows but it wont help much. Being a first time chicken dad I don't want to stress them out or worse.

I know first few day old chicks need Hi heat in the brooder but the selection at the store are now older and I am not sure how to proceed. Do I still need the heat lamp and let them self regulate or is the current temps in the shop/garage enough.

I would like to get my girls this week as they will be fully feathered by October and the coop will be done ready for them to move in since October stays fairly warm here in the south.

Any thoughts- suggestions- ideas- hand holding would greatly be appreciated:bow

The C.O.E. says "Hand holding in this instance is acceptable":yesss:
To other readers your input would also be welcome. Thank you in advance.
Stay clucky everyone.
BB.
That is definitely too hot for them. They need an area to cool down and keeping them at those temperatures will kill them. How hot is the garage? Ideally you want to have around 70-75 on the cool side and 95 on the warm side of the brooder for the first week and then every week after lower the hot side temp by 5° until 4 weeks old when they don’t need heat anymore.
 
I would like to get my girls this week as they will be fully feathered by October and the coop will be done ready for them to move in since October
You should try getting them out within the first couple weeks of September. Keeping them in a brooder past then is really not needed and can become a huge pain. I moved mine out when it was still getting to just above freezing during the night at 5 weeks old.
 

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