As grouchy as your Avatar?Hahaha - I totally see her grouchy face!Sooo cute![]()


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As grouchy as your Avatar?Hahaha - I totally see her grouchy face!Sooo cute![]()
Mostly lurk, but popping in to say "Hi" to all the other PA peeps! I can't believe how many of you are so close to the Chester County area. We need a chicken meet-up or something.![]()
We have 8 layers from local breeders in the area, 11 in the basement brooder and hopefully a few eggs to incubate for a spring hatch. We grew out of the first coop shortly after we started keeping chickens. Made over the kids wooden playhouse structure and added that, now dh has a niggling in his ear about a new spring coop that I'm thinking we are needing for all of these chickens!![]()
Chicken math is surely like no other!
That's awesome! I LOVE it when they have personality. Can't wait to see what mine do. (p.s. my avatar has kung foo style... or maybe it's kung pao style lmao)As grouchy as your Avatar?Thanks, she does have an attitude. I put my hand in front of her without food, I got pecked
; if there's food in my hand, she jump on and happily eat. No other chick acts like her.![]()
CCL pullets often have a small head spot (remember, they do have 1 copy of the barring gene that makes the headspot). Almost all black barred pullet chicks have headspots also. The difference in size is pretty dramatic, and the very dark stripes she has really confirms her as a pullet.Here are some pictures of my very first chicks:
fluffy butts and Dolly the Rees CCL(Note that she has a head spot. Is that normal for a pullet?)
CCL pullets often have a small head spot (remember, they do have 1 copy of the barring gene that makes the headspot). Almost all black barred pullet chicks have headspots also. The difference in size is pretty dramatic, and the very dark stripes she has really confirms her as a pullet.
I find Rhodebars and Welbars to be the easiest to "sight sex". Legbars, Bielefelders and Black Sexlinks sometimes need a closer look. For all of them, I like if they are about 5 days or older, then I can look at the developing feathers also as a secondary confirmation. The wing feather color differences are particularly dramatic in the black sexlinks because the females have no barring at all.
Wow, that's lots of water! How you get rid of it? Luckily, we never had flooding problem here.I hope no one here was in the direct path of any of last night's storms.
Minor flooding here, Creek stayed away from my buildings, basement never got over 5 inches deep. (I consider that nothing major here)
I hope no one here was in the direct path of any of last night's storms.
Minor flooding here, Creek stayed away from my buildings, basement never got over 5 inches deep. (I consider that nothing major here)
Wow, that's lots of water! How you get rid of it? Luckily, we never had flooding problem here.