hehehehe
They are cute! I am glad both hatched out!
They are cute! I am glad both hatched out!






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Matti and I have a lot to learn. We need to make some adjustments big adjustments it's just to hard to throw the dead babies out. We are putting another in the hatch-er tonight. It looked real good the last time I candled, but sure won't hold my breath. We will sprinkle some cat food around on the ground tonight. If we can get them to eat it will incorporate it into the food. Sadly it's to late for this season I'm sure. We were going to start a large aviary for the babies this fall, but think I will put that on hold to make sure I can hatch. If we don't get this right soon I think maybe we should just watch the ones we have.Lil Zoo,,you will if not already have learned,,the toughest hill to climb with peas is getting them to hatch.The other half is seeing them reach 6 mos of age.So far this year I'm very close to 60% hatched that was developing,,but one of the three power outages we had contributed to losing 18 eggs all put in a few hours before one 8 hour outage.Sure a generator would have been nice but if I was gone for a day and not here to know the power was even out,,a lot of good that would have done me.Someone has to start the generator. Don't beat up on yourself,,you've come a long way from no peas,to now having a passle of peas.Strength is in numbers.And knowledge.Feeding garden scraps is fine,,and if birds are penned and cannot easily access greens they are great to offer.Another breeder and I was just speaking today about diet specifically for Charcoal birds.Seems Charcoal males don't live but about 7-8 years and thats too young to die,especially when you really have a unique bird.This breeder found out thru a blood test that their charcoal bird did not have equal results of other peafowl being fed the exact same diet.So we're wondering if the Charcoal mutation needs higher protein and iron levels than other colors because of the bloodwork findings they discovered.
Every bird metabolizes vitamins and minerals diffrently.,you may have a perfect 24% protein ration with all trace minerals needed for perfect health,,but if 1 bird cannot extract everything in that ration,,it does no good to feed it.Kinda like feeding dogs protein levels derived from cereal grains,,a dogs intestines are not designed to extract protein from cereal grains,rather meat.Canned dog food from meat is more digestable than dry food using soybeans as the main source of crude protein.
I know from the two pens I changed the protein level in,I noticed a big diffrence in hatchlings,,the quitter syndrome ended within days of the new feed.So next March all my birds will have a higher protein diet including 18% layer crumbles,and the balance to get a 23-24% protein level by using Black Oil Sunflower seeds and dry catfood mixed.Peas love Millet and Sorghum seeds,,they will pick them out of the feed first but they alone are not high enough in protein.My feed store can get any bagged grain you want.I've read Kelp is super high in protein and easily digestable,,and my feed supplier can get some with notice.Alfalfa meal is one thing I add to chicken feed in the wintertime,,it alone is over 20% protein and sometimes much higher.Sugar beets is another form of high protein I need to check into.But the most important part is will your peas eat it? If they are picky and don't like your ration they just as well eat plain corn or grass.