"Louisiana "La-yers" Peeps"

Seems like everyone is busy, busy, lots of hatchlings too!!!
We finished the new coop today, but I forgot to take pics, I'll have to add some later. It is a duplex of two smaller coops under one roof and we already have both sides full. The 4 campine and 1 Araucana have one side and 9 buff orphingtons have the other. I just got those today, 8 pullets and 1 roo. All of these are about 9 weeks old. It's funny how much bigger the buffs are than the campines even tho they are the same age. Come spring time I ought to have lots of eggs!!! Total now I have 14 girls and 4 boys, but I have separate coops and runs for each group. How does this chicken math work???
Would love to see some pics of your birds and new coop when you get a chance :)
 
Yes. You have definitely given me direction :) They will be staying separated into groups that's for sure. When I get to the point of needing it I plan to build a small run that the chicks can access from the brooder.

On the run extension I thought of breaking it up into thirds. Each section would be about 10'6" wide. So one section would be 1005 sqft the other two 765 sqft.
However I do it it will be built a little different than the other run. I'll use hardware cloth on the sides and for the top I'm planning to use 2"x2" 16 gauge fencing 100'x72" roll
http://www.redbrand.com/Products/SpecialtyApplication/YardGardenKennel.aspx Support the wire with the 10' lengths of top rail that is used for chain link fencing.
It should be a little cheaper and much easier this way and I don't think I have any worries with something getting in. What are your thoughts on using this wire fencing? I think the chances are slim that something as small as a mink would be around and I'm really not worried about snakes if the birds are of a decent size. There will be doors between the existing run and extension anyway if I want to close them at night.
I think you have it figured pretty close, especially using the top rail, you can probably find it used on a buy,sell,trade site on FB, in fact i am going to put a request for some on the ones i am on, i want to extend my yard and top rail is a $ a foot, if i could pick up some used , probably get it for a quarter a foot, i think the 2x2 wire should be good on top, top rail also comes in 20' joints.I could kick my but, acouple years ago, i was helping my son in law move his mother and there was about a 1000' of top rail being left behind, i could have got it free but it was hot and i just didn't bother with it. Good luck on your construction, you will do fine.
 
Seems like everyone is busy, busy, lots of hatchlings too!!!
We finished the new coop today, but I forgot to take pics, I'll have to add some later. It is a duplex of two smaller coops under one roof and we already have both sides full. The 4 campine and 1 Araucana have one side and 9 buff orphingtons have the other. I just got those today, 8 pullets and 1 roo. All of these are about 9 weeks old. It's funny how much bigger the buffs are than the campines even tho they are the same age. Come spring time I ought to have lots of eggs!!! Total now I have 14 girls and 4 boys, but I have separate coops and runs for each group. How does this chicken math work???

Sounds like you have figured the math out. Pam
 
Terri, sounds like you have some nice, healthy chicks. Cool that they can can poop $$ :)

LOL I wish!
lau.gif
 
I got a very visual lesson last night.

A couple of days ago I was told on the HAL thread to rotate the position of my hatching eggs around the incubator to make up for the fact that it is a still air incubator and may have cooler or warmer spots. I have a Turner, but no fan. So I was doing that. I had moved then once.

Last night I thought I would peek at one or 2 eggs and see if we could see and pink of even more. And in a couple from the edge (that had been on the outside row, just different sides because of how I had moved them) we saw a short blood vein, and appeared more pink. Exciting. Then I looked at one from the center of the incubator. It had a full twice the amount of development as the others from the edge.

Nice visual lesson and now I was an incubator fan! Lol!!!
 
I got a very visual lesson last night.

A couple of days ago I was told on the HAL thread to rotate the position of my hatching eggs around the incubator to make up for the fact that it is a still air incubator and may have cooler or warmer spots. I have a Turner, but no fan. So I was doing that. I had moved then once.

Last night I thought I would peek at one or 2 eggs and see if we could see and pink of even more. And in a couple from the edge (that had been on the outside row, just different sides because of how I had moved them) we saw a short blood vein, and appeared more pink. Exciting. Then I looked at one from the center of the incubator. It had a full twice the amount of development as the others from the edge.

Nice visual lesson and now I was an incubator fan! Lol!!!

When I was hatching peacocks, the late great Mr Burt told me in order to improve the hatch rate, even though I have an auto-turner, to turn the eggs lengthways three times a day in addition to the auto-turner rocking them side to side. He was right. I always had great hatch rates. If I had to turn by hand again, I'd do it the same way with chicken eggs.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom