Updating again...
I keep thinking that this thread is done, then I come across reasons to revive it once again. This is my saga for chick raising this year so I guess I'll just keep it going as opposed to starting another one.
Here's a picture from last week of the RIR's up on the roost...
They are roosting every night now and the slanted poop board is working every bit as well as I hoped.
Over the weekend we positively determined that we do indeed have two Rhode Island Red cockerels in our original brood. I've had my suspicions for some time, but now along with the aggressive behavior between the two, they are both starting to grow very handsome tail feathers, neck feathers, and spurs. The two hens are surely hens, as they have duller feathers that are still mottled, while the two roos have nice brown shiny feathers with black spikes.
I have said before that I would not hesitate to put a roo in the freezer, but real life is setting in. With our daughter's wedding later this year, I really don't have the time yet to take the butchering course I wanted, and I simply do not have the facilities yet to deal properly with dressing live chickens. If I had to do it in an emergency, that would be an entirely different matter.
So we are making arrangements for a friend of ours to take both roos. He raises chickens for meat, does his own butchering, and is more than happy to take a pair of 9 week old fryers off of my hands.
That leaves us with 2 RIR hens, and 2 Golden sex link hens, which is one short of our max allowance of 5 hens. What to do?
Well, I headed to the feed store today and came home with a pair of Black Jersey Giant pullet chicks...
These two are a lot less flighty than the GSLs are, and don't mind being picked up at all. Where the RIR and GSL hens will top out at or under 8 pounds, these 2 will probably top 10 pounds. Even though they are more mellow than the others, their size should enable them to keep up with the others.
This puts us 1 hen over the legal limit here. I'm going to keep all 6 for now on the outside chance we get another roo or another casualty. But anyone who knows the henhouse is here, is already on the list for fresh eggs, and since nobody is going to be counting heads, I think we are safe as long as we keep our act together. Anyone who takes one look at the coop/run and the condition the birds are in will have no doubt they are being will tended.
Onward!