Please post it on the Natural Chicken Keeping thread, if you haven't already. It's awesome!Some of you may have already seen this but I thought it was hilarious!!
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Please post it on the Natural Chicken Keeping thread, if you haven't already. It's awesome!Some of you may have already seen this but I thought it was hilarious!!
After you mentioned them when I was up your way I looked up the Kunekune online. They do look like a great pig to have around. Not too big. Easy keepers. And darn cute. Of course being a rare breed around these parts means they are out of my price range. Not that they seem too bad price wise but there is no way I could have just one. I guess I just really need to win the lottery.![]()
Totally adorable. I'm hoping to do the chick thing next year. Hatching under a hen in the spring. I haven't had chicks before. Always started pullets or hens. I'm super jealous.No time to catch up, but heres a photo and video update of the little ones! Trying to get the "rare exotic" out here for a photo shoot.
Huddling on top of the brooder. I've since put cardboard on top to make cleaning easier.
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Decided it was time for a bath evidently
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Found our exotic here...
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Whilst trying to photo the exotic, the others were far too interested in gettin in my face.
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Snack time
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Call me crazy. (You all don't have to do it at the same time!) But, I swear that some of my chicken eggs are still fertile. Just now, I'm finding some of the eggs with the small granular white spot on the yolk that would indicate an infertile egg. Some of my eggs still have the wider bulls eye that indicates a fertile egg. My roosters went to freezer camp well over a month ago. Any studies out there... or records set for continuation of fertility after absence of rooster???
I believe its up to four weeks, but that's just word of mouth, no studies.Call me crazy. (You all don't have to do it at the same time!) But, I swear that some of my chicken eggs are still fertile. Just now, I'm finding some of the eggs with the small granular white spot on the yolk that would indicate an infertile egg. Some of my eggs still have the wider bulls eye that indicates a fertile egg. My roosters went to freezer camp well over a month ago. Any studies out there... or records set for continuation of fertility after absence of rooster???