alibabba
Songster
Ah ha! Yes, thankyou! And that is what I will find out more about next!Many vacccinate the egg.
http://www.worldpoultry.net/Layers/...on-system-for-small-scale-producers-1542330W/
wonder how much this is?
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Ah ha! Yes, thankyou! And that is what I will find out more about next!Many vacccinate the egg.
hmmmm, verrry intersting (best german scientist voice) lol.I'm not concerned with my broody chicks being smaller, I just thought it was an interesting observation.
Not only are the chicks in the brooder a ton bigger, but they are also a lot more developed. I've been able to tell or a week who is a pullet and who is a cockerel. The chicks with the broody hen still look like babies and are showing no sign of gender determination. LOL
Quote: I like that world poultry website. I also like Engormix poultry.
Some day we may be able to do that, buy some gadget that's pre loaded.
I'm sorry too! It doesn't seem to get easier.oh no.. I am so sorry!
So sorry, this disease is a heartbreaker. Fooling us all the time.Well darn it! I was hoping to get through a whole month without losing a bird. Unfortunately I had to cull the last of my broody raised pullets this morning. Estel made it to 28 weeks and laid her last egg on Sunday. When she was about 10 weeks old she began coughing and I thought for sure she wouldn't make it. The cough lasted about a month. Just when I was about to cull her, it went away. She seemed totally normal and began to lay eggs. Her sister, who was always bigger and feistier, became suddenly ill with respiratory distress and died at 20 weeks. Since then Estel has been kind of a loner but did manage to make friends with some of the younger (vaccinated) pullets. Yesterday at lunch time she was totally normal and out eating with the flock. That night I couldn't find her in the coop. She had nested in a bale of hay. She felt very warm and was open mouth breathing. It seemed like the likely tumor problems she had as a youngster were bothering her again. I gave her some Tylan and she made her way up on to a roost in the pullet coop. This morning she didn't come down to eat and her wings were droopy. Too weak to walk or eat, I had to cull her.
Fly free with your sister pretty girl.