Hope you're safe up there! We didn't even get rain so far.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Yep, we are all great enablers here! you have caught the bug.@ sharkman I got the lumber today to make mine today. I need to put plastic on the floor because it's treated lumber. It has to stay outside when not in use. Once it gets rained on and dries a couple times it will be fine. I'm going to put wheels on it because I used to drag the old one around with the tractor and that's why I need a new one. I'll make it not as high this time, more in line with yours but longer. I leave the birds in quite awhile, so they'll need the room. They stay in the shop with the brood light until they don't need the heat.
I wasn't so serious about this until I got on this site!
At $5 a piece new, someone was making life hard for her. Plus the rains have made it easy to pull them out. Sureley someone noticed them taking the clips off to get them out. such a shame.An older lady told me the other day the someone had stolen about 50 T posts right off her pasture fence. Just left the wire fall.
Looks like you caught the bumble foot in time. I keep a collapsible dog crate on hand as a quick isolation pen. You can set it up in the regular coop. If you like to recycle... use upright freezer shelving wired together to make a temporary pen. Old oven racks make good window covers and can be wired together for a pen.Was just hanging out, with the birds, for this brief respite in the weather, before round number 5,346, for this year hits us, and noticed my Black Jersey Giant rooster, crouched down, on the ground, like something was wrong. Normally, he's quite the "Cock of the walk", but tonight, he seemed very placid. One of the turkey hens came by him, and pecked at him, pretty severely. He just took it. Soon, the other turkey hen came over, and pecked him, and he got up, and limped away, towards the tom turkey, almost like the tom, was to be his protector. My tom, typically very aggressive and dominant, was actually nice to him.
So, I went and tracked him down, caught him, and looked him over. Sure enough, he had an open wound on his left foot, and sign of infection going on. The foot was hot and swollen. So, I grabbed my emergency medical kit, told my wife to get her stool and a pillowcase, and proceeded to get set up, to do bumblefoot surgery on him. Fortunately, for him, it was a fairly minor case, compared to the case that got me initiated into chicken surgery. We got the kernel out. Flushed him with iodine then penicillin, then injected him with 3cc of penicillin, in the thigh of the affected foot. Then bandaged it well, and put him back in the coop. He would have gone in a recovery pen, but with over 100 chicks right now, I have no hospital room/brooders available. But, last year, when I did my first bumblefoot surgery, on a RIR hen, I had none then either, and she did fine, with it being re bandaged and a new injection, every two days.
Anyone have any better solutions?
An older lady told me the other day the someone had stolen about 50 T posts right off her pasture fence. Just left the wire fall.
How are the mosquitoes everywhere else here they are like bald eagles in size what do y'all use for the chickens for mosquitos?