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- #411
I don't want to breed & I don't want chicks ~ just eggs & pretties.We are getting more regular size chickens soon. I just want eggs lol not roos and tiny new ones runnin around

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I don't want to breed & I don't want chicks ~ just eggs & pretties.We are getting more regular size chickens soon. I just want eggs lol not roos and tiny new ones runnin around
Look at those pretty girls!
lol You don't have to do anything!Oh, and what is it exactly that I have to do to the bottlebrush?
lol I think all chickens are nuts. I am losing the battle of the pecking order. The girls would rather go to jail than be good!Okay, so the middles are nuts!! I HAVE to go put them up every night! I waited till dark and all they were doing was running back and forth screaming their heads off... so I have to catch them and put them in their crate.. I am almost ready to integrate so they can just follow the big gals to bed.. but they are still small and am afraid some of the gals are gonna be mean
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Thank you so much!! I appreciate all that.. and will def get out there and trim the dead..hope I do it right..lol You don't have to do anything!It will grow just fine if left alone BUT if you would like it to grow nice & bushy you are best to prune. Bear with me 'cause I'm not very good @ explaining stuff like this.
The bottlebrush flower forms @ the end of a stem. New growth will usually form in front of the flower before the flower dies off but when all the flower falls off you are left with bare stem that nothing will grow on so you get growth, bare stem, growth & usually not so much flower. Am I making sense?
So when the flower dies off you prune behind it. [Deadhead ~ if you use this term]This will encourage the plant to bush out rather than grow long & scraggy.
These links are American ~ so deal with stuff like frost that I don't get.
https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/ornamental/shrubs/bottlebrush/pruning-bottlebrush-plants.htm