As long as the pots can drain so that the roots don't stay wet, they should be okay. Keep the soil moist like a wrung out sponge until you plant.
When you do plant them, you need to wait until the ground is workable, not soggy. Dig a $40 hole for a $10 dollar tree....at least four times the diameter of the size of the pot. Should be the same depth as the evel of the trunk at dirt level. You can loosen the soil under the root ball but make sure it is at ground level or just slightly above when you set the ball in the hole. Lossen the root ball and attempt to gently spread out some of the roots. You don't need to amend the soil, contrary to popular belief. If you have clay soil, amending the soil creates a soft spot that holds water and the roots either rot or can't break out of the soft soil into the clay.
Thanks for the help! I'm getting very worried about getting them in the ground. I would have done it this weekend, but DH can't make up his mind about getting a chainsaw new or used


Our power has flickered a few times. Think the rain is suppose to last most of the day, so the birds & goats will be staying penned up. I keep thinking I should find something productive to do, but for now I am listening to the thunder.
Kids have school today & tomorrow, then we will be busy busy busy! They get every Friday off for the rest of the yr! It will be a nice change of pace. Weekends always seem to go by too fast here with all the projects we have going on! I am thankful for the rainy days! We have already mowed our grass more this yr than all of last yr! Huge improvement!
lights have been toying with me here to. I'm already worried enough about my incubator, I don't need anything to add stress to that. Only a 4 day school week? That's cool, why are they doing that? Budget?
That's what I love love love about baby chicks! I've raised animals my whole life but didn't have baby chicks til last year. I've never seen such comedy![]()
I'm sure lone chicks do get lonely since chickens are social animals. Your best bet would be to put one of the others in with the lone chick for a week or so before you transfer it. Chicks are cute but they're not very smart and that way those 2 will think they grew up together and will at least have each other when you go to integrate them. A lone bird put into a flock has a sign on its back that says "Torment Me".
I've only used my Little Giant incubator twice. I got a 50% hatch with shipped LF Cochin eggs last summer with it using dry incubation. This last time I tried with just 4 eggs but did NOT use dry incubation. I wish I had. 1 mixed breed chick hatched, and I peeled the shell off another chick or it would've died like the other 2. I guess technically that's a 50% hatch rate. If I try again it's going to be dry incubation with my own eggs. I'm still undecided on buying a Brinsea. I hate to spend $130 and not get any better than a 50% hatch rate anyway.
You could always sell your LG to me, that would get you a little bit closer to the Brinsea
