INDIANA BYC'ers HERE!

It's been a very bizzy afternoon, took the oldest babies outside to enjoy the weather

but they only got 20 min. cause I had to hurry them back inside.

Isabella had 2 billy's at 4:45 pm today. the first one I had to preposition cause 1 leg was going the wrong way and I think he got fluid on his lungs cause he is not doing to good . he was wiggling around before I could get his leg out. the 2 nd had no problems and is doing well.

chick rookie ~ I'm glad Isabella had the babies on a warm day. I don't know about goats, but I just did some looking online and found: All goats are very vulnerable to cold wet weather. Goats need access to shelter to protect them from the wind chill and freezing rain. If they're in your barn, make sure that there's plenty of hay to keep them warm and water (not frozen) is very important. Here's more info:

Goats need plenty of fresh air. Pneumonia is the second most common cause of death among goats, and it's poor air quality that causes it. Goats should actually be put outside every day unless you have really extreme weather, such as single digit wind chill or storm. Although our does come into the barn at night, our bucks live in three-sided shelters that are open to the south, and we make sure there is plenty of straw in there when it's going to be getting below 20 degrees.

The other thing to keep in mind is that heat lamps are the #1 cause of barn fires -- and we almost had one here, but luckily my daughter walked in when it was still a small fire in the straw, and she was able to put it out with a bucket of water. If you have temperatures below freezing, and you have newborn kids, be sure that your heat lamp is secured to the wall or something overhead and cannot be knocked down by a curious goat. Once the kids are a couple days old, they will be fine unless temperatures fall well below zero Fahrenheit.

If you're worried about them, a good alternative to using a heat lamp with kids is to either make little goat coats or little huts for the kids to curl up in. We put a small plastic dog crate in the kidding pens for the kids to sleep in, but I remove the door because it seems to get closed a lot if you leave it on. For my Nigerian dwarf kids, I use the sleeve of an old sweatshirt to make coats. The wrist band becomes the collar; the seam runs under the kids belly, and I cut two little holes for the front leg. If you have a buckling, be sure to cut away enough of the coat under his belly so that he doesn't pee on it.

The only thing I really do differently with my adult goats in cold weather is to give them warm water, which they really seem to love. All of them usually take a big drink every time I bring a new bucket of warm water to them.
 
I think these hobbit hole chicken coops are pretty cool! They're on the My Pet Chicken website. It would be fun to have a whole Hobbiton village for the girls!
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Adorable!

Got home from my trip last night. All is well. Chickens and chicks are fine.

Went through the chicks that hatched. Some mixes, some Bresse, a Basque Hen, a BBS Barnevelder, another boy Legbar and two pullet legbars! That gives me three pullets and six Roos out of ten eggs set.

Then when I went to collect eggs....21!!!!! I actually called our niece to see if she collected eggs the day before, and she did. That is 7 more eggs than my previous best day. Both legbars, both Welsummers, and all 8 Bresse laid eggs, plus a lot of others whose eggs I can't be sure of. I guess everyone has decided to get with the program.
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Great news! Glad everything was ok when you got back.

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Thats fantastic to hear

Quote: They think that foam is pure candy
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Dad had put some behind the ugly bush to cover the crawlspace, they were dragging hunks off of it doing chicken football all over the yard
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I finally found it and replaced it.
 
I am going to attempt to build a brooder/grow out pin inside my barn. The chicks are getting a little to big for inside the house. I hope the weather holds off the ice cold temps. They will get a little more room and it should be better for all
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I did the same with a shed. It is really helping me to be able to hatch year around! My winter chicks joined the main flock yesterday, and it was incredibly smooth.
I bust out laughing when I saw Red (GLW) and his oldest son flaring neck feathers, and lil red made a very hasty exit
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Well I have not had a great day! After having no success catching the mink, my chicks seem to have been lost in the mail. They were shipped yesterday afternoon from Missouri, so they were not coming far. They were shipped Priority 1 day. Tracking information hasn't been updated since they were in TN last night around 10 pm. I am hoping they aren't lost somewhere, but the post office closes in 30 minutes and if they aren't there now there is a very good chance they will get caught in the impending snowstorm.
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I was so excited to get them and now there is a good chance they won't even survive the trip.

Meanwhile the war is on with the mink. I modified the trap in the hopes of making it more alluring.
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Oh no! Here's hoping they locate them and get them to you safely!
Good luck with the mink wars!!!

Off topic but I was finally able to answer my question today if my bees were still alive and with the nice weather I'm having today i was able to see them out of my 2 hives.:) This is exciting as I'm looking forward to trying my bee's honey from my plants this year. When you first start a hive as I did last year one doesn't usually have enough honey to harvest the first year as the amount they make you leave for them to eat during the winter.
Awesome news!

Quote: UGH thats so sad to hear! My "guest hive" was active today also.

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Our thread talks about all type of livestock! No worries, I love to learn about them. We are still thinking about it ourselves.
 
I am going to sign up for the NPIp blood testing class. I pretty excited, because then it will be so much more convenient and I can stop bugging my current tester
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awesome news!

one of my two EE hens laid its first egg today, close to 4:30pm. It is more of a green blue than blue but still a big hit with the children. Now my egg carton has white (duck), light brown (Barred Rock & Production Red), medium brown (Red Stars), and a green somewhat blue egg. It is a nice variety compared to last year's all the same light brown eggs.
Its really fun to have the different colors!

Here is the first part of our new "Barn brooder"!! It's just a basic 2'h- 4x8 box it will have a hardware cloth removable lid. It's made of cheap lumber (I know it won't last) but it's a fun project for me and my Kids, well my daughter, my boy is at wrestling practice.





Looks great! I like easy!

Oh geez, the weather on the 6pm news bumped the snow amount for Elkhart Co. up to 6 - 9 inches with wind/drifting. We may have hit 50 degrees today and got a lot of snow melted, but the replacement white stuff is on its way. I'm sure school will be delayed yet again and maybe cancelled for the 11th(?) time this winter -- I don't know for sure -- I've lost all track. On a brighter note, tonight was the parent performance/dress rehearsal of Willy Wonka at the high school. The kids did a great job in spite of the 10 lost rehearsals due to the weather. I almost didn't recognize my daughter dressed as an oompaloompa! Opening night is Thursday and most of the shows are sold out already. Gonna be a busy but fun rest of the week!
Be safe in the snow! I bet this is a lot of fun for your daughter, those memories will last her a lifetime.

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Quote: This is something I had thought of doing too, so you can test your own flock?

Just popping in for a quick update!

My DH and I built the duck run today. I just finished staining it about an hour ago... Tomorrow, as long as the weather mostly "cooperates"
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we will get the hardware cloth on. Right now I'm DEAD!
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Here are a few photos:

The start of it!


Oh, and Pearl FINALLY held a chicken today! There was no hesitation, she just did it. Just like that... This little lady, she even caught on her own.


Eh hem... The best photo I could get after dark. Lol! I wanted it to look kind of rustic and natural, so I used a cheapo redwood stain to lengthen the life of the wood.

Well... I'm off... to have a drink, or two.
Annie
Looking great! Your little one is adorable too!
What chicken is she holding?

It's been a very bizzy afternoon, took the oldest babies outside to enjoy the weather

but they only got 20 min. cause I had to hurry them back inside.

Isabella had 2 billy's at 4:45 pm today. the first one I had to preposition cause 1 leg was going the wrong way and I think he got fluid on his lungs cause he is not doing to good . he was wiggling around before I could get his leg out. the 2 nd had no problems and is doing well.


can anyone tell me if the new baby will be ok tonight? going down to 32. is that too cold for him, will mom be able to keep him warm?
Congrats! Is her stall draft free? If you are in any doubt, you could stack hay bales and make a warmer wall around them.


I am behind on posts because I have been so worn out by spending every possible minute outside these past two days.

We took our 8 week old chicks-- three Silkies and two English Orp chicks out to see the world today for the first time-- since it was 70 degrees. My son and his GF watched them get used to the chicken tractor for an hour while I was in the side yard with the 6 hens. When I brought the hens in the back, their reaction was as I expected: Nene, my infamous RIR hen marched over there as fast as possible. She did not take kindly to the situation. lol The Rooster (blue orp) sprung into action as he and Nene exchanged words-- and tried to exchange pecks. The other hens weren't very interested and walked by. But my little English Chocolate bantam, Bonbon, came back and just looked. I think she recognized her English cousins. haha We brought the chicks back in. I'll be glad when the warm temps are here to stay so I can move those messy things out! I have a small coop and will either use that or section off the big coop at first until Nene settles down.

Wow thats good to know! Sounds like an honest businessman too.
 
I'm so sorry to hear that about yours and I hope you do much better this year.I thought mine were dead because of the usually cold and snowy weather we got this winter, so i am getting 3 new nucs to replace my 2 hives and when i bought my hives last year i bought 3 hives but i acquired 2 nucs so i had an extra hive to use its supers if my others hives needed them. So now i need to get 2 more hives from Legacy Apiaries the place where i got them from last year. I don't know what type of hive and wood you have selected to use but for myself i wanted cedar for ease of maintenance/rot resistance, it's lighter to carry then pine and i liked the medium hive advantages i read about that claim it overwinters better and maybe that's why mine are still alive and if so it was worth the extra price. I hope it's ok to talk about/endorse a product i used and like in this thread. I'm ordering again from http://www.legacyapiaries.com/ as i like that they are from Evansville, IN(i like to support local business when able to even if they are way south of me:)And through my phone calls and email interactions with them last year about my slightly customized order they seemed to really care about the bees,their products and their customers. I will say that on my order I kinda created what i wanted in my hives compared to what they offer, so what i paid was different then their prices listed. So if you would like something a little different then what you see in the listings i would suggest asking them if they can do it. Like in mine, I wanted my frames to be a beeswax foundation, not the RiteCell plastic one they offered and my bottom boards were screened for IPM. I hope we both have great success in our apiaries this year:)


Thanks for the info. I'm definitely going to check out the link you posted.
 
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I got the call at 6 this morning that my chicks had arrived at the post office (it took 20 hours for them to drive the 5 hours from Missouri to Indiana, no wonder the USPS is going bankrupt). I left right away to go get them and heard the beautiful sound of chirping from the box! They all survived but you should have seen them attack the food and water! I got two extra male Bielefelders (for a total of 5 Bielies) and two extra Isbars (for a total of 5 straight run but increases my odds for a good female showing!). They are just beautiful and not at ALL skittish. I don't know if that is the breed personality already showing through or if they were handled a lot, but they aren't afraid of me reaching in from above and when I pulled a couple out and plopped them down for pictures they just sat and accepted some loving with no fear! The Bielies are HUGE too! About 3 times the size of the Isbars. I'm not sure what the hatch dates were, so they may be a bit older.

Male Bielefelder - they are lighter colored with cream and bronze barring



Female Bielefelder, darker with chestnut and bronze barring



Blue Isbar - they are so tiny next to the Bielies! I'm not sure if they are younger or of there is that big of a size difference!

 
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Ugh. Power is out. Have little over 100 eggs incubating and my blue/gold brahmas are in lockdown!
our power is flickering, today is lockdown for my BPR & RIR!! It's showing the snow will pass around noon. I hope the power can make it through! Good luck Brad!!
 

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