LOL! I'd be a big hit in my minivan when I drop my first grader off at school.![]()
^^^^
I couldn't help but laugh out loud at that.
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LOL! I'd be a big hit in my minivan when I drop my first grader off at school.![]()
I didn't know you lost some to the heat also.It's been awfully hot this summer. Apparently it's the new norm, extreme weather that is. I read that it could be a cold winter with lots of precipitation with the El Nino the climatologists are predicting. One of the reasons I'm giving the Barbezieux a try is for heat tolerance. My Bieles made it through the worst of it. I did put a fan on them during the night a few times when the heat index was into the 100's. We'll see how the do next year when they're older.
The main reason I culled them was that I needed the space since I moved the Barbs out of the brooder and also if I wanted to selective breed for a hatch this fall. I was keeping them in the coop and run to take pressure off the rest of the flock.
Pam have you seen or read any studies on adverse long term physiological effects of low humidity during incubation. When humidity is low enough to shrink wrap and the chick pips the membrane but is unable to pip the shell. Reason I'm asking is the cockerels I just culled all seemed to be small for 5 months old compared to the others I have that came from the same stock. It was my second hatch and all of them were shrink wrapped due to low humidity during the whole incubation time rather than becoming dried out during lockdown. I'm wondering if the low humidity can affect size/growth. I've searched but can't find any info on this. I may not be looking in the right place. I started a thread in the incubation and hatching section today.Ok I was just curious sence they were on the small side.
Pam
Pam have you seen or read any studies on adverse long term physiological effects of low humidity during incubation. When humidity is low enough to shrink wrap and the chick pips the membrane but is unable to pip the shell. Reason I'm asking is the cockerels I just culled all seemed to be small for 5 months old compared to the others I have that came from the same stock. It was my second hatch and all of them were shrink wrapped due to low humidity during the whole incubation time rather than becoming dried out during lockdown. I'm wondering if the low humidity can affect size/growth. I've searched but can't find any info on this. I may not be looking in the right place. I started a thread in the incubation and hatching section today.
Well dang it, whatever dug around my coop the other night came back & got my prized RIR roo and 1 of my older hens. Inglewood harvested their corn so I guess it was run out of the cornfield. Either a coyote or a fox is my guess. I had them out late yesterday evening & then it started raining & was getting dark so I ran outside & shut the coop, but didn't realize those 2 were still outside. Hindsight! - I'll be doing a head count from now on & NO more free ranging until the soybeans are harvested.
So, I'll be gathering every egg from my remaining 4 hens for the next week & firing up my incubator in hopes of hatching another RIR roo. He was so big & pretty & gentle. I am so sorry to lose him. I do still have my 3 RIR hens so I should be OK. I hadn't really planned to hatch anything until later in the year but am now out of choices there.