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Another good thought.This is good thinking. But I rather cut cardboard into the right size. My chickens prefer eating printed paper over cardboard and scratching in paper makes a mess. Cardboard is easy to replace too.
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Another good thought.This is good thinking. But I rather cut cardboard into the right size. My chickens prefer eating printed paper over cardboard and scratching in paper makes a mess. Cardboard is easy to replace too.
My main concern is chicks toes getting caught and chicks not being able to climb back over the 7cm barrier. And whatever is placed there needs to support the weight of the food and water without stressing the borderline flimsy joinery of the nest box.Given MJ’s climate I wonder if we are over engineering the slats problem.
I wonder if 7cm deep x 28 wide x 60 long might be too heavy.
I'll try it and find out.
There is no need to level it at all after 3 - 4 days. 7 cm is easy to take for a few days old chick. If you fill it temporary, up to 4 cm with paper/cardboard and an old towel (against slipping) on top its okay. Its a good place to put water and chick feed mash away from the nest/straw.My main concern is chicks toes getting caught and chicks not being able to climb back over the 7cm barrier.
My chickens prefer eating printed paper
Well, there's nothing like a cuppa to help the news go down
I just had the Washington post for breakfast dear....
Oh nice, but I prefer the Times ..with a cuppa as MJ would say !
I still have the cardboard packaging from the new little coop, so I'll give that a try. I'll try to make it 7cm deep because I don't know how tiny the bantam Orpington chicks will be. If the eggs are any indication, they will be very small. I'll tape the cardboard together, and wrap the whole thing in a towel, which I'll staple into the cardboard to make the whole package sturdy. That way I can reuse it later if I decide to get a clutch of eggs for Ivy in a month or so. That's a big if, but I may as well make something reusable instead of disposable.There is no need to level it at all after 3 - 4 days. 7 cm is easy to take for a few days old chick. If you fill it temporary, up to 4 cm with paper/cardboard and an old towel (against slipping) on top its okay. Its a good place to put water and chick feed mash away from the nest/straw.
PS I have a barrier of about 4 cm between the nestbox area and the small coop floor, where I put the water an chick feed.
Hatch in 2023
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She had plenty to say for herself.She's up!
The eggs look perfectly fine to me. I don't think they need cleaning at all. Not even with a dry cloth.
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However I thought the straw was too thin. Mary had compressed it to 2cm which didn't seem to offer much insulation.
So I bulked it up.
With Mary off the nest, I also took the opportunity to measure up the nest box compartment so its slatted floor can be covered up. 28x60cm to accommodate the uprights in the corners. There's also a 7cm barrier between nest compartment and roosting compartment. I'm thinking about what to use in the nest compartment. Lightweight, non-toxic, 7cm thick. I'll pack around the sides with sand. Maybe a piece of foam insulation cut to size and wrapped in two sealed pillowcases?
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Last night I didn't notice Mary has some straw stuck to one spur, which opens the possibility she broke the first egg.
Anyway here she is fresh from the nest.