Incubators Anonymous

Quote: Speckled Sussex

Among my top 3 breeds for foraging. I bought a few more pullets at the feed store and, well, the opportunity arose to get a rooster from someone eliminating his flock.
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Marans, BO and SS. EE pretty good too. The others tend to hang near the coop
 
Speckled Sussex

Among my top 3 breeds for foraging. I bought a few more pullets at the feed store and, well, the opportunity arose to get a rooster from someone eliminating his flock.
hide.gif
Marans, BO and SS. EE pretty good too. The others tend to hang near the coop
oh ok. 8) my choice for foraging is dorking. the cochins too but they tend to hang closer to home. the dorkings are all the way at the bottom of the horse pen, way up in the woods above the house, etc. the cochins hang out between the coops and house mostly.
 
wow. when i got home, i had 4 more eggs pipped... 2 just zipped in the last hour. another mille/partridge cochin and the only birchen to make the journey from... wherever they came from. LOL

and for cuteness factor, here's my rendition of "dorking and cochin and quail, Oh My!"

 
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My incubator windows are going to end up coverd and recoverd with nose prints I cant see anything on these quail eggs but they have to be close the waitint is killing me and I wish I knew when they were actually sapose to hatch but I have heard 3 diffrent lengths for incubation
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My incubator windows are going to end up coverd and recoverd with nose prints I cant see anything on these quail eggs but they have to be close the waitint is killing me and I wish I knew when they were actually sapose to hatch but I have heard 3 diffrent lengths for incubation
barnie.gif
all of mine hatch on day 18 - 99% of the time. like popcorn. once they start, most of them go quick. some might straggle a day or so but experience is they are usually weak...
 
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How could I have forgotten the dorking!!! I bet they ARE great foragers. My marans travel the farthest away, when they are not in the breeding pens of course.
that was one of the reasons they made such great farmyard chickens over the last 2 centuries. everyone had them until the commercial meat bird came along and getting chicken meat was easier, if not cheaper...

super broodies, great personality, beautiful colors, wonderful forragers, good winter time layers, with exceptional meat qualities. why in the world did they nearly go extinct?
 

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