My daughter can hear, but she still uses sign language. So, when she is in the car with me, I do sign while I drive, but still try to keep my hands on the wheel. It does take some creativity!
Hmmmm... and we share the same roads....
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My daughter can hear, but she still uses sign language. So, when she is in the car with me, I do sign while I drive, but still try to keep my hands on the wheel. It does take some creativity!
The cheapest brooder and fastest to assemble is a Lowe's large moving box. It's $1.39. If you need more space, add more boxes and cut doorways between them. Put heat in one, water in another and food in another.
When the chicks outgrow them they can be composted along with the feces or cut open and laid down in a garden bed to suppress weeds and pile more compost on top. The worms will eat the boxes.
what do u mean skip a spot.and what about goose@chicken hawk 33 yes, duck eggs fit into the chicken egg turners. Sometimes you have to skip a spot, but they do fit.
The only true thing you have to worry about is are they old enough to defend themselves. Oh and if there is a rooster in there with them. If they are not laying yet, the rooster will try to mate them and can do damage.Even if the rooster is younger than the hens?
The question is this. I have a laying flock with a rooster and a group of youngsters with a rooster. The rooster in the laying flock is a peckerhead and will be losing his head. I want to put the youngsters (bout 3.5 months old) in with the laying hens that will be losing there rooster. When Kevin gets wacked is that a good time to throw everybody together? I don't care about the breeding aspect of it all. I want one happy group after the peckerhead loses.
The established flock is SLW and BA (3 of each) and the new ones will be CCL (3 hens and a roo). Should I just throw them all in the coop and let them sort it out or would leaving them in the run be a better option?
Say please.
NOTen pounds of feed per pound of duck!
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I don't have geese. As far as skipping a spot, the eggs go in, but some might be too fat for another egg to squish in the slot next to it. Unless you have a turner that lays them down in rows. I will take some pictures. BRB!
I won't have to worry about the rooster part as the new one is a youngster (about 4 months old) and the hens I'll be adding to the fun fest are about 3.5 months old so I would think they could defend themselves. All the odds might not be in there favor as it'll be 6 older birds (all laying hens) to the 4 younger birds( 3 girls and 1 boy) but everything will be messed up because the top of the pecking order is being removed and none of the girls are aggressive whatsoever.The only true thing you have to worry about is are they old enough to defend themselves. Oh and if there is a rooster in there with them. If they are not laying yet, the rooster will try to mate them and can do damage.