Oh, PS, thanks for the reminder about not handling them. I haven't handled them much at all this time. I've been waiting to see how they turned out because of the info you gave me when I had Peanut a Butter the attack roo.
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Here are my roosts
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We converted an old mini barn that was on the property. The only problem is they have to be cleaned off. We put some laminate flooring on the shelves which makes them much easier to scrape off and then I can either scrape it into an empty feed bag or right into the deep litter depending on my mood.
I've not noticed any pecking order issues with this and when I introduce babies (think 6 week olds) into the flock it gives them a safe place to go during the day because the big girls stay on the floor.
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I have to respectfully disagree on the handling of roos. Handle them as much as possible. The way to calm an aggressive cockerel is by grabbing them up and holding them. Gently pushing thier heads down in submission. It humiliates them to be picked up and held in front of their hens. We have seven roos. They have all been trained to respect people by being held. We don't walk around them if they are in they way, we walk through them to make them move. They arent allowed to mount hens in front of us. They get knocked off, showing we claim the hens. If they forget their place, which will occasionally happen, they get picked up and held during chores. It quickly reminds them that we are larger and top of the pecking order. All too often I hear people say they dont handle their roos for fear of them being people aggressive and find that they have horrible boys on their hands. Handling them has its rules though, which I think is what pipd meant. If you are going to handle them, it must be to show them dominance. They cant be allowed to squirm out of your hands, they can only be released once they stop resisting. It normally doesnt take long. You want to have boys around that you can easlily walk up to and pick up. You dont want a scared flighty rooster on your hands. They are fear aggressive. If they get scared of you or your family they will lash out. Hand feed them to show them you are a source of food and a positive thing. That you are not a threat. Chickens see in rbg and infared wavelengths, so to them you look like a blob of wavy colors, with no definitive shape. LOL if I wear different shoes than normal my boys notice and I have to speak to them and show them I am not new or scary. They are not complicated animals. You just have to stay on top of the pecking order at all times. Sorry this is so long winded, and I didnt mean to butt in, I just wanted to put that out there. We would have a mess on our hands with 7 boys if we hadn't learned in the very beginning how to train them right away. From hatch, if at all possible. There are a lot of really good articles on here about it. Thats where we got started with how to handle our boys. Here is a good thread. https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/390911/important-how-to-deal-with-an-aggressive-roosterThank you for the suggestions. My son asked if we could keep the d'uccle so that is probably what will happen. He is pretty cute and I don't think he would be too hard on my hens.
I went out to the coop tonight and got a surprise! One of my Cochins is broody and hogging a nest box.. I still have room for more if it works out but I'm nervous about a couple of things. One is that my roo is a bantam Oeg and the hens are a mix of LF and bantams. Should I take any LF eggs out from under her? What happens when you cross a bantam and a LF? It doesn't sound like a good idea but what do I know. Next, I have a few eggs from my Spitzhauben girl and my Ameraucana in the house that I could give her but is that ok? They have not been washed or refrigerated. All from within the last 5 days. And finally as my hens are most likely mareks carriers, should I even let her hatch? I'm keeping my current babies as carefully away from the others and being as vigilant about my biosecurity as I can for at least the first 10-12 weeks as recommended by Purdue. These babies would be exposed immediately.
I don't even go to my friends houses that have chickens right now or wear any of my coop shoes to the tsc so that I don't inadvertently carry the virus there so this is a pickle.
I'm open to suggestions. I'd be lying if I said I didn't want to see a mixed chick though. I bet they'd be cute.
I think my temps were on the low side. Still air at 100 in the center of the grouping. I did dry incubating and started raising the humidity at lockdown on day 18. Got it to 62% on day 19 where it's been since. Still waiting on peeps and even pips. I pray morning gives me better results.How sure are you about the temps for the entire 21 days. Even just a tad on the low side can delay hatching for 24 hours sometimes even 48 hours. Unless there is a strong smell coming from the bator, I would let it run and maintain the humidity till 12 hours after day 22 ends. Then I would candle in a dark humid area if possible. setting a few pots of boiling water in a closed room will increase the humidity quite fast. Running a shower works too. tossing in a warm wet towel helps the humidity in the bator stay high.
I have to respectfully disagree on the handling of roos. Handle them as much as possible. The way to calm an aggressive cockerel is by grabbing them up and holding them. Gently pushing thier heads down in submission. It humiliates them to be picked up and held in front of their hens. We have seven roos. They have all been trained to respect people by being held. We don't walk around them if they are in they way, we walk through them to make them move. They arent allowed to mount hens in front of us. They get knocked off, showing we claim the hens. If they forget their place, which will occasionally happen, they get picked up and held during chores. It quickly reminds them that we are larger and top of the pecking order. All too often I hear people say they dont handle their roos for fear of them being people aggressive and find that they have horrible boys on their hands. Handling them has its rules though, which I think is what pipd meant. If you are going to handle them, it must be to show them dominance. They cant be allowed to squirm out of your hands, they can only be released once they stop resisting. It normally doesnt take long. You want to have boys around that you can easlily walk up to and pick up. You dont want a scared flighty rooster on your hands. They are fear aggressive. If they get scared of you or your family they will lash out. Hand feed them to show them you are a source of food and a positive thing. That you are not a threat. Chickens see in rbg and infared wavelengths, so to them you look like a blob of wavy colors, with no definitive shape. LOL if I wear different shoes than normal my boys notice and I have to speak to them and show them I am not new or scary. They are not complicated animals. You just have to stay on top of the pecking order at all times. Sorry this is so long winded, and I didnt mean to butt in, I just wanted to put that out there. We would have a mess on our hands with 7 boys if we hadn't learned in the very beginning how to train them right away. From hatch, if at all possible. There are a lot of really good articles on here about it. Thats where we got started with how to handle our boys. Here is a good thread. https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/390911/important-how-to-deal-with-an-aggressive-rooster
I have to respectfully disagree on the handling of roos. Handle them as much as possible. The way to calm an aggressive cockerel is by grabbing them up and holding them. Gently pushing thier heads down in submission. It humiliates them to be picked up and held in front of their hens. We have seven roos. They have all been trained to respect people by being held. We don't walk around them if they are in they way, we walk through them to make them move. They arent allowed to mount hens in front of us. They get knocked off, showing we claim the hens. If they forget their place, which will occasionally happen, they get picked up and held during chores. It quickly reminds them that we are larger and top of the pecking order. All too often I hear people say they dont handle their roos for fear of them being people aggressive and find that they have horrible boys on their hands. Handling them has its rules though, which I think is what pipd meant. If you are going to handle them, it must be to show them dominance. They cant be allowed to squirm out of your hands, they can only be released once they stop resisting. It normally doesnt take long. You want to have boys around that you can easlily walk up to and pick up. You dont want a scared flighty rooster on your hands. They are fear aggressive. If they get scared of you or your family they will lash out. Hand feed them to show them you are a source of food and a positive thing. That you are not a threat. Chickens see in rbg and infared wavelengths, so to them you look like a blob of wavy colors, with no definitive shape. LOL if I wear different shoes than normal my boys notice and I have to speak to them and show them I am not new or scary. They are not complicated animals. You just have to stay on top of the pecking order at all times. Sorry this is so long winded, and I didnt mean to butt in, I just wanted to put that out there. We would have a mess on our hands with 7 boys if we hadn't learned in the very beginning how to train them right away. From hatch, if at all possible. There are a lot of really good articles on here about it. Thats where we got started with how to handle our boys. Here is a good thread. https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/390911/important-how-to-deal-with-an-aggressive-rooster
If you have mareks carriers, I wouldn't let them reproduce. Lf and bantams cross just fine. From what I understand.
raisinemright ~ I'm assuming yours are chicks, so I think they should have access to food and water all the time. I'm also guessing that they are one flock in one coop, and aren't being integrated with older chickens.Question.... I have a few birds that dont seem to know how or when to walk back up the ladder into the coop? I find them huddled together in a corner of the run?? How do I train them to go back into the coop? Should I not let them have free range of feed and take the feeders out until evening so they have a reason to go back in? Please any advice with this would be helpful!!
CCCHICKENS~ I'd like to see a pic of your bantam blue Ameraucana hen when you get a chance please.The chicks have been outside almost 3 days. They hadn't used the heat plate until around midday today and they still aren't spending much time under it. I miss them being inside.
I have been getting more eggs. 6 eggs, 4 eggs, 3 eggs, 3 eggs, 3 eggs. I have over 3 dozen eggs in the fridge. My bantam Blue Ameraucana hen from littleameraucanamom is laying very well, and color is great. She lays 2 or 3 days in a row, takes a day or two break and starts again. Her eggs are pretty close in size to the 3 or 4 LF ameraucana eggs I have got. Imagine comparing a nickle and a quarter.