The relative narrowness of the run provides some challenge, but otherwise, it sounds like you are off to a very good start. As @aart and other have said, places (not dead ends) to hide and break line of sight, and I think you are ready.
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See my flock in Sig. The birds are essentially of three ages - either last year's late spring purchases, or the December+ hatchings, with the SLW splitting the difference. All are now integrated, sharing the run and house overnight, free ranging during the day. Actually, I need to separate and retrain them as to sleeping arrangements, now that the second house and run are built.Thank you all for your help and guidance!! We are a week in and they aren’t fully integrated so I’m continuing to try more clutter and rearrangements. When they’re free-ranging, they’re fine (for the most part) although they’re paired off - not a group which makes me a little sad. I’ve also got two chicks that will soon be ready to enter the flock and final plans for a new, much bigger coop and run which will help the situation by the time we add the two baby chicks. So far, the elder hens won’t let the teenagers into the coop so I’ve got a separate coop for them.![]()
Totally normal, no reason to be sad.although they’re paired off - not a group which makes me a little sad.
thanks. I’ll need to harden up a bit when it comes to hen social politics.Totally normal, no reason to be sad.
The younger birds will not be part of the older flock until they start laying.
even then they may still stay segregated.
Thank you! What’s Sig?See my flock in Sig. The birds are essentially of three ages - either last year's late spring purchases, or the December+ hatchings, with the SLW splitting the difference. All are now integrated, sharing the run and house overnight, free ranging during the day. Actually, I need to separate and retrain them as to sleeping arrangements, now that the second house and run are built.
They continue to travel in little clusters, "mini packs" if you will, while free ranging. They don't (entirely) split by breed, though there is a weak tendency in that direction. Have yet to figure out the rules they've sorted themselves by. Not sure if its typical for all chickens, but its certainly normal for mine.
I wonder if it’s better to integrate them younger than me who’s trying to integrate 3-month-olds. Are yours good in the henhouse too?I put the 8 week old chicks out in the run on Saturday, they loved it. Sunday I added the 2 year old hen. She pecked two of them once, made some I'm the boss chicken noises if they got to close and that was that. They all got along for the whole day. Very happy !!