"Louisiana "La-yers" Peeps"

Quote:
OUCH!! Sounds like that really hurts!!
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Thanks for the info. Will they put themselves to bed at night do you think?? And one more question can you mix your Sebbies & Scovies together or do they need to be seperated?? Thanks!!

I've run out of answers.
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I have a small building that we built specifically for the geese but they've never used it for shelter. I had planned that they'd lay their eggs in it but instead they built their own nests on the ground. So, to work around them, I picked up their nests and placed them in dog houses or dog crates to give them shelter. That worked out great! The geese won't even go into the building during bad weather -- go figure.
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I use the building to keep their food dry. They have food available 24/7. During laying season I feed layer pellets and the rest of the time I feed flockraiser. They don't eat too much feed because they'd rather be out grazing on grass. They do use their building for eating inside.

When I build shelter for them at our property, I'm going to build open pens with a roof to close them up a night, and/or when I plan to be away to keep them safe. I will probably have a small portion closed off to keep their food dry, and a section with laying boxes built on the ground. I will likely keep them penned up during laying season to keep my mating pairs/trios together.

As for them tucking themselves in at night, maybe Gracie can share her experience. For me, I think it depends on what you train them to do. I have a smaller fenced in area that I sometimes will heard them into. Some of my geese will just follow me in, others have to hearded in. I don't know if they would go in at night on their own like chickens do.

As for mixing the Sebbies & Scovies, I don't know the answer but I'm wondering the same thing. My Scovies are not quite big enough to be let loose but, when they are a little bigger I plan to mix them with the Sebbies to see what happens. I'll have to be careful and watch to see what happens because my geese used to harrass my chickens. I hope they can live together.

Thanks Twiley for all the great information!!
hugs.gif
 
Quote:
OUCH!! Sounds like that really hurts!!
hide.gif
Thanks for the info. Will they put themselves to bed at night do you think?? And one more question can you mix your Sebbies & Scovies together or do they need to be seperated?? Thanks!!

I've run out of answers.
lau.gif


I have a small building that we built specifically for the geese but they've never used it for shelter. I had planned that they'd lay their eggs in it but instead they built their own nests on the ground. So, to work around them, I picked up their nests and placed them in dog houses or dog crates to give them shelter. That worked out great! The geese won't even go into the building during bad weather -- go figure.
hmm.png
I use the building to keep their food dry. They have food available 24/7. During laying season I feed layer pellets and the rest of the time I feed flockraiser. They don't eat too much feed because they'd rather be out grazing on grass. They do use their building for eating inside.

When I build shelter for them at our property, I'm going to build open pens with a roof to close them up a night, and/or when I plan to be away to keep them safe. I will probably have a small portion closed off to keep their food dry, and a section with laying boxes built on the ground. I will likely keep them penned up during laying season to keep my mating pairs/trios together.

As for them tucking themselves in at night, maybe Gracie can share her experience. For me, I think it depends on what you train them to do. I have a smaller fenced in area that I sometimes will heard them into. Some of my geese will just follow me in, others have to hearded in. I don't know if they would go in at night on their own like chickens do.

As for mixing the Sebbies & Scovies, I don't know the answer but I'm wondering the same thing. My Scovies are not quite big enough to be let loose but, when they are a little bigger I plan to mix them with the Sebbies to see what happens. I'll have to be careful and watch to see what happens because my geese used to harrass my chickens. I hope they can live together.

All of our geese are out free ranging together right now. Their diet consists mainly of grass supplemented with a mixture of laying mash and hen scratch. They walk themselves in the barn at night and sleep in the breezeway. They actually love the rain, and will rarely come in unless it is super windy. I would be careful about mixing the sebbies with the scovies. Geese are rather bossy and territorial, so you would have to keep an eye on them.

I used this pen to house my two pairs during breeding season this year. The pen is about 20 X 20 or so, and we made this little hut out of some scraps we had laying around. The girls made a nest in it, but they really liked to hang out in an old dog house that we had in there as well. There is someone in Scott, LA that is selling plastic barrels on Craigslist, and I plan on buying a few to try out as nest boxes for the geese. This seemed to work during the winter. It is all metal though, so I wouldn't recommend it as a summer shelter. We have silkies in that pen right now, but they have plenty of shade other than the metal hut.
58104_hut.jpg
 
Quote:
I've run out of answers.
lau.gif


I have a small building that we built specifically for the geese but they've never used it for shelter. I had planned that they'd lay their eggs in it but instead they built their own nests on the ground. So, to work around them, I picked up their nests and placed them in dog houses or dog crates to give them shelter. That worked out great! The geese won't even go into the building during bad weather -- go figure.
hmm.png
I use the building to keep their food dry. They have food available 24/7. During laying season I feed layer pellets and the rest of the time I feed flockraiser. They don't eat too much feed because they'd rather be out grazing on grass. They do use their building for eating inside.

When I build shelter for them at our property, I'm going to build open pens with a roof to close them up a night, and/or when I plan to be away to keep them safe. I will probably have a small portion closed off to keep their food dry, and a section with laying boxes built on the ground. I will likely keep them penned up during laying season to keep my mating pairs/trios together.

As for them tucking themselves in at night, maybe Gracie can share her experience. For me, I think it depends on what you train them to do. I have a smaller fenced in area that I sometimes will heard them into. Some of my geese will just follow me in, others have to hearded in. I don't know if they would go in at night on their own like chickens do.

As for mixing the Sebbies & Scovies, I don't know the answer but I'm wondering the same thing. My Scovies are not quite big enough to be let loose but, when they are a little bigger I plan to mix them with the Sebbies to see what happens. I'll have to be careful and watch to see what happens because my geese used to harrass my chickens. I hope they can live together.

All of our geese are out free ranging together right now. Their diet consists mainly of grass supplemented with a mixture of laying mash and hen scratch. They walk themselves in the barn at night and sleep in the breezeway. They actually love the rain, and will rarely come in unless it is super windy. I would be careful about mixing the sebbies with the scovies. Geese are rather bossy and territorial, so you would have to keep an eye on them.

I used this pen to house my two pairs during breeding season this year. The pen is about 20 X 20 or so, and we made this little hut out of some scraps we had laying around. The girls made a nest in it, but they really liked to hang out in an old dog house that we had in there as well. There is someone in Scott, LA that is selling plastic barrels on Craigslist, and I plan on buying a few to try out as nest boxes for the geese. This seemed to work during the winter. It is all metal though, so I wouldn't recommend it as a summer shelter. We have silkies in that pen right now, but they have plenty of shade other than the metal hut.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/58104_hut.jpg

That's a great idea on the barrels!! Someone in Baker, La was selling some for $10 not to long ago!! Thankd for the info and the pic Gracie!!
 
Quote:
All of our geese are out free ranging together right now. Their diet consists mainly of grass supplemented with a mixture of laying mash and hen scratch. They walk themselves in the barn at night and sleep in the breezeway. They actually love the rain, and will rarely come in unless it is super windy. I would be careful about mixing the sebbies with the scovies. Geese are rather bossy and territorial, so you would have to keep an eye on them.

I used this pen to house my two pairs during breeding season this year. The pen is about 20 X 20 or so, and we made this little hut out of some scraps we had laying around. The girls made a nest in it, but they really liked to hang out in an old dog house that we had in there as well. There is someone in Scott, LA that is selling plastic barrels on Craigslist, and I plan on buying a few to try out as nest boxes for the geese. This seemed to work during the winter. It is all metal though, so I wouldn't recommend it as a summer shelter. We have silkies in that pen right now, but they have plenty of shade other than the metal hut.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/58104_hut.jpg

That's a great idea on the barrels!! Someone in Baker, La was selling some for $10 not to long ago!! Thankd for the info and the pic Gracie!!

This guy was selling them for $7. They had soap in them, so I'm thinking they should be pretty safe!
 
Quote:
This guy was selling them for $7. They had soap in them, so I'm thinking they should be pretty safe!

Yep, these kinda had some kind of food in them. I think it was the Brown's Dairy that was selling them!! I've been wanting to get one for gas too!! My FIL had bought one and then bought the pump but he's so picky about stuff that he wants to buy some special gas with no ethanol and it's right at $4 a gallon!!
ep.gif
I'm not paying half of that
rant.gif
!!

Hope they end up working out for you!!
thumbsup.gif
 
Quote:
This guy was selling them for $7. They had soap in them, so I'm thinking they should be pretty safe!

Yep, these kinda had some kind of food in them. I think it was the Brown's Dairy that was selling them!! I've been wanting to get one for gas too!! My FIL had bought one and then bought the pump but he's so picky about stuff that he wants to buy some special gas with no ethanol and it's right at $4 a gallon!!
ep.gif
I'm not paying half of that
rant.gif
!!

Hope they end up working out for you!!
thumbsup.gif


My dad has to buy ethanol free gas for his boat. You can do an internet search and it will tell you all your local ethanol-free gas stations. It's no more expensive than regular gas usually.
 

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