Mojo Chick'n :
Well, with the nasty cold, I figured I'd better do something with the coops and calf stalls, so I spent all morning cleaning and putting hay in the coops and calf stalls. Looks rather cozy out there, and I even got that dang top coop finished, finally
I've been talking about cleaning it for three months, I think (it's been empty all that time - perfectly good coop going to waste.)
Now I just have to figure out who to put where. Technically the top coop is my brooder coop - so whomever goes into it will have to get along with babies ok - maybe I'll put the cochins in there. I have a cochin hen who thinks she wants to hatch eggs, silly girl. I'm not about to let her do that this time of year. I have fewer cochins than any other breed, except the bantam rocks. I may stick them up there, too, cause the buff and black look good together running around, and that top coop has a lot more room than the lower cells, do. Not much for higher perches, so the cochins can have the floor and lower perches, and the four buff rocks can take the higher perch areas. The orps can go into the top cell of the lower coop, George in the middle (no run - they can go free range still - I don't hatch their eggs) and the barred rock girls and overflow in the bottom cell (since my BR Roo took a dirt nap).
The fun part will be trying to net them all and seperate them when they don't want to be caught LOL. Probably take me a couple of days, at least, to get them where they are supposed to go. I have two girls inside who can go out to the brooder coop once I get the others settled in place. They are getting pretty big for a brooder bin - they were Thanksgiving hatches, so they're 6 weeks old - I'll wait until this cold snap is passed, though, to put them out.
meri
Hmmmmm......we put straw in our cow stall and he eats it all.....guess he will sleep on the cold ground. He gets a 5 gallon bucket and a half of feed a day plus straw......i am calling him pigcow from now on.