- Jan 26, 2015
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Guineas are seasonal layers. Probably none around until mid spring at the earliest.
Thank you. This is my first time buying guineas and wasn't sure if I need to get on someone's hatch list or how to go about finding them.
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Guineas are seasonal layers. Probably none around until mid spring at the earliest.
If you let the chickens in the garden ...you wont have a garden... they will eat everything ..I am with you here! You know that your chickens are happy, healthy and provide good nutritious food for you and your family! I am hoping my hens eat all the slugs in my garden this year and leave great fertilizer behind!
Well now there are ways to set up a brooder without those over heating red lights. Which by the way are much too hot for what is needed. Those lights are for unheated outdoor sheds IMO.
You can use ceramic heat bulbs. Lower wattage and safer I think. You can also use incandescent light bulbs too. Or an oil filled heater hung just above the brooder. Trouble is some folks don't have any imagination and only go by what the books say.
I've got some of these. They come in different wattages. Though the Red heat bulbs do too. Some you can order that are only 175 watts and not the fire setting 250. A lower wattage will be just fine and won't melt the fixture. I say use a lower wattage but more than one unit. You can lower the heat source and if one burns out the others are still working. I put a thermometer inside the brooder to monitor the temp.
Those stupid cardboard kits they sell are a sure way to burn down the house.
If you do brood inside the house, the room temp must be taken into account. A room temp of 65-70 will reduce the need for a 250 watt firestarter.
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If you let the chickens in the garden ...you wont have a garden... they will eat everything ..
What they dont eat they will dig up when they dustbathe
If you let the chickens in the garden ...you wont have a garden... they will eat everything ..
What they dont eat they will dig up when they dustbathe
Oh okay ....I thought you meant during the growing season...as they would be like the Tazmanian devil then too ..@gramma...they are part of my crop rotation plan. My sister let her 3 silkies lose on her garden at the end of season and they were like watching the Tazmanian devil! But, they were grub eating machines!
Mine did that occasionally ...most of the time they respected the fence ..they tended to get in when I forgot to close the gate ...I let mine in one year and then locked them out when I planted. Haha. They learner there was food In There and jumped over the fence every year since no matter what I did.
Now that we moved and got a new flock. Hoping there will be food for us too.
Thanks!
I'm sure there will be more questions. I told Hubby to reach out to a couple of the local beekeepers too. One is not far from where we live. Another is the dad of a highschool classmate, think he may be out of beekeeping now but any knowledge will be helpful.