Firefoot
Songster
Hey all,
So first off, my weirdo Ameraucanas would stay in the coop ALL day if I let them. In the morning when I come out, all the others are out an about, milling around in the woodchips, the roo is crowing, and Pancake and Toast are still on their roost cooing to each other. They are ~28-30 week old blue Wheaten Ameraucana pullets, I've had them since they were about 12 weeks old, and they've been free-ranging as a flock (with the baby roo, an EE, and a Sussex [and 2 others but they've died]) since mid-August. I let the birds out of their yard in the afternoons, anywhere between noon and 3, and they will happily scurry out to forage and dustbathe. BUT I have to shoo them out of the coop first. Yesterday it was 2:30 and they're just on their roost, hanging out. Why are they doing this and how can I encourage them to be outside more?
They have a 10x40 run for 8 birds with a couple very large branches tied up to perch on, a big tree stump, chairs, a small table with shelves, and two waterers and two feeders. The run was filled with 3-4" of fresh wood chips a few weeks ago. An 8' span of the run by their coop is covered. I don't want to close off the coop because they should be laying any day now and I want them to find the boxes. I also don't want to be feeding them tons of scratch to get outside and haven't found tons of treats that they like (they are still suspicious of mealworms!)
Another question: So this group of 5 birds including the Ameraucanas has been living in my bigger coop since July. My original 3 girls have been living right next to them in a smaller chicken tractor parked on the fenceline. I hate this tractor and want to switch them over to the big coop with everyone else as was the plan. Originally each coop had a 10x20 run but it's been opened up for about a week now. They've been free ranging together for months. There aren't any behavior issues and the big girls are still the boss (young birds are 20-28 weeks). Last night I put the big 3 in the coop to spend the night. I'm hoping they'll figure this out quickly, but is there anything I should do to make this transition more obvious to them? Also, will they figure out where to lay? The new coop is bigger and more inviting and friendly than their previous one and there are 6 boxes to choose from. I just don't want them to protest me, and I want them to be good role models for the younger girls once they start laying.
So first off, my weirdo Ameraucanas would stay in the coop ALL day if I let them. In the morning when I come out, all the others are out an about, milling around in the woodchips, the roo is crowing, and Pancake and Toast are still on their roost cooing to each other. They are ~28-30 week old blue Wheaten Ameraucana pullets, I've had them since they were about 12 weeks old, and they've been free-ranging as a flock (with the baby roo, an EE, and a Sussex [and 2 others but they've died]) since mid-August. I let the birds out of their yard in the afternoons, anywhere between noon and 3, and they will happily scurry out to forage and dustbathe. BUT I have to shoo them out of the coop first. Yesterday it was 2:30 and they're just on their roost, hanging out. Why are they doing this and how can I encourage them to be outside more?
They have a 10x40 run for 8 birds with a couple very large branches tied up to perch on, a big tree stump, chairs, a small table with shelves, and two waterers and two feeders. The run was filled with 3-4" of fresh wood chips a few weeks ago. An 8' span of the run by their coop is covered. I don't want to close off the coop because they should be laying any day now and I want them to find the boxes. I also don't want to be feeding them tons of scratch to get outside and haven't found tons of treats that they like (they are still suspicious of mealworms!)
Another question: So this group of 5 birds including the Ameraucanas has been living in my bigger coop since July. My original 3 girls have been living right next to them in a smaller chicken tractor parked on the fenceline. I hate this tractor and want to switch them over to the big coop with everyone else as was the plan. Originally each coop had a 10x20 run but it's been opened up for about a week now. They've been free ranging together for months. There aren't any behavior issues and the big girls are still the boss (young birds are 20-28 weeks). Last night I put the big 3 in the coop to spend the night. I'm hoping they'll figure this out quickly, but is there anything I should do to make this transition more obvious to them? Also, will they figure out where to lay? The new coop is bigger and more inviting and friendly than their previous one and there are 6 boxes to choose from. I just don't want them to protest me, and I want them to be good role models for the younger girls once they start laying.