- May 10, 2014
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The spots are on the shells. Glad to hear it is ok. Thanks so much.
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Posted this in the natural thread too but would like to hear from y'all:
A "housing question" for those of you that may have experience....
I am wondering if anyone has ever used a dog house, inside a kennel that is fenced on all sides and top, to house birds in the current weather.
I have used dog houses for years. I have too many breeding pens to build coops for all. In a 10 x 10 dog kennel, I hang an 8 x 10 heavy duty tarp with one corner draped low to drain water and light snow. The dog house and feeder go under the tarp. Tarps on a side or two make good windbreaks.I have a question for the silkie breeders here. I have a black pullet from paint breeding and the only roo I have for her is a partridge or her paint dad. What could happen if I put her back in with her dad for paints? I'm asking for trouble breeding her back to her dad? She is in with my Duccle pair at the moment But as soon as I rehome my black sizzle pen she will be moving into one of the 2 silkie pens, the partridge pen or the paint pen with her dad. Any suggestions on what to do?
I agree with Pipd. I will breed a bird back to a parent that has good traits for one or two generations. Your black with the paint could give you both blacks and paints. Several breeders that I know say to breed black to paint rather than paint to paint to get sharper definition in the color.[COLOR=900000]I can't help with paint genetics, but yes, offspring to parents for a few generations is a widely used form of breeding to promote the genes that breeders want to promote. I believe the only thing frowned upon for this is sibling to sibling as this tends to lead to more of the undesirable traits coming out. Think of it this way--half of a bird's genetics comes from the bird's mother, the other half from the father. If the father is a very good specimen, breeding him to his daughters means that the next generation will consist of roughly 75% of his good genes. If those daughters are bred to another male, their offspring will only receive about 25% of those good genes.
Of course, there is a limit to how much you can do this without weakening your lines, hence only going five or so generations using this method. You do want to bring fresh genes in occasionally. For the purposes of this post, however, breeding one bird back to a parent isn't going to be disastrous.[/COLOR]![]()
I have used dog houses for years. I have too many breeding pens to build coops for all. In a 10 x 10 dog kennel, I hang an 8 x 10 heavy duty tarp with one corner draped low to drain water and light snow. The dog house and feeder go under the tarp. Tarps on a side or two make good windbreaks.
This isn't good for all breeds; my bantam polish, for example, are inside a shed. No frizzles should spend the winter in an outside pen.
@leslea
How old are your birds? I've often wished mine would go in the litter together to warm up in the cold. Except when they were little ones, they've always stayed on the roosts.
26 Degrees here this morning. Ground is hard frozen.
@pipdzipdnreadytogo
I've never used heat in my hen shed. But on days like this I'm always tempted. I keep thinking that if these birds were really jungle fowl, they surely never had this cold of temperatures in their natural habitat. I also wonder if they'd go south for the winter if they had the opportunity.
@leslea
How old are your birds? I've often wished mine would go in the litter together to warm up in the cold. Except when they were little ones, they've always stayed on the roosts.
26 Degrees here this morning. Ground is hard frozen.
@pipdzipdnreadytogo
I've never used heat in my hen shed. But on days like this I'm always tempted. I keep thinking that if these birds were really jungle fowl, they surely never had this cold of temperatures in their natural habitat. I also wonder if they'd go south for the winter if they had the opportunity.