ashesfallingdown
Chirping
- Mar 28, 2022
- 30
- 73
- 81
I have four 18 week old EE pullets that haven't started laying yet and (except one) have very little comb and wattle development. I got them each when they were about 3-7 days old.
We had a wet cold spring here in the PNW, with no real warmth or dry out period until mid-June. Up until this point, my girls went to bed inside their coop on their own without issue. I have an Omlet cube inside a 6x12 run. The cube has an automatic door that shuts once its dark and opens in the morning. It's cleaned daily. There are no mites, and I'm positive that there has been no attempted predation.
Once it got warm out they just stopped going to bed on their own, preferring the perches inside the run. I need to shore up the run with hardware cloth, and until that point I don't feel comfortable leaving them on the perches because of raccoons and possums, which are the only predators I really have in my urban neighborhood.
If I lift them from the perches and place them on the floor of the run at bed time, they walk right up the ladder and go to bed inside the coop, following each other like the pied piper. If I place one of them directly inside the coop, they all follow as well. They seem to have no issue with coop, and when I "remind" them, they go right in. They have just stopped initiating their own bed time.
Is this just teenageness? Is it cause it's hot out and its nicer on the perches? I wish I understood why they stopped. The coop is well ventilated, and because it's in the middle of the run, I'm comfortable leaving the droppings tray out so they get direct fresh air.
I go outside every night and put them in the coop but that's getting old. I'd love to encourage them to enter their coop again without my prodding. Any ideas on how to recreate this habit?
Thank you!
We had a wet cold spring here in the PNW, with no real warmth or dry out period until mid-June. Up until this point, my girls went to bed inside their coop on their own without issue. I have an Omlet cube inside a 6x12 run. The cube has an automatic door that shuts once its dark and opens in the morning. It's cleaned daily. There are no mites, and I'm positive that there has been no attempted predation.
Once it got warm out they just stopped going to bed on their own, preferring the perches inside the run. I need to shore up the run with hardware cloth, and until that point I don't feel comfortable leaving them on the perches because of raccoons and possums, which are the only predators I really have in my urban neighborhood.
If I lift them from the perches and place them on the floor of the run at bed time, they walk right up the ladder and go to bed inside the coop, following each other like the pied piper. If I place one of them directly inside the coop, they all follow as well. They seem to have no issue with coop, and when I "remind" them, they go right in. They have just stopped initiating their own bed time.
Is this just teenageness? Is it cause it's hot out and its nicer on the perches? I wish I understood why they stopped. The coop is well ventilated, and because it's in the middle of the run, I'm comfortable leaving the droppings tray out so they get direct fresh air.
I go outside every night and put them in the coop but that's getting old. I'd love to encourage them to enter their coop again without my prodding. Any ideas on how to recreate this habit?
Thank you!