lysanderish
In the Brooder
Just when you start to think you have a grasp on the whole bird mom schtick, they (the birds) decide they're going to start being weirdos. Well, at least, mine have.
So I have 4 chooks all if whom are currently laying and are about 6 months old, iirc. Until recently, everyone except Lady Pouff (a polish), who occasionally decided that up a tree was her bed, was pretty content to sleep in the coop. They liked to pile up in the one nesting box because our coop is a poorly designed prefab that I'm praying will make it through the winter at this point (I would have liked to look at other options but the fiance got us a "deal" and was pushy). Recently, however, everyone has decided that the top of the coop is the best bed and I have to wait until well after dark to move them inside the coop or they'll just run out and get on top again. I honestly wouldn't care that much if they didn't leave just so much poop on the roof oh my god or if I was not worried that a neighbor cat would be emboldened by the dark and make a meal of somebody. Any tips to help keep them off the coop? I was considering finding some way to block it off with bird netting.
Another problem I'm having is that my buff orpington, Arnold, might be going broody. She's normally pretty docile. She pecks my feet when I have the audacity to try to do chores outside without first giving her a treat, but she's otherwise very gentle and sweet. Recently she's begun screeching and puffing up at me when I happen to check the nesting box while she's in there and she's taken to biting us if we touch her while she's sitting in there. I've noticed she's been spending increasing amounts of time sitting on the fake eggs, tucking them under her, and generally disrupting everyone's routines by refusing to get her butt out of the box, bc of course all four of them insist on laying in the same box (except when the fake eggs aren't there, because that means it's time for everyone to go lay eggs in the hedges). She sounds like she's going broody to me but idk this is my first batch of tiny dinos.
So I have 4 chooks all if whom are currently laying and are about 6 months old, iirc. Until recently, everyone except Lady Pouff (a polish), who occasionally decided that up a tree was her bed, was pretty content to sleep in the coop. They liked to pile up in the one nesting box because our coop is a poorly designed prefab that I'm praying will make it through the winter at this point (I would have liked to look at other options but the fiance got us a "deal" and was pushy). Recently, however, everyone has decided that the top of the coop is the best bed and I have to wait until well after dark to move them inside the coop or they'll just run out and get on top again. I honestly wouldn't care that much if they didn't leave just so much poop on the roof oh my god or if I was not worried that a neighbor cat would be emboldened by the dark and make a meal of somebody. Any tips to help keep them off the coop? I was considering finding some way to block it off with bird netting.
Another problem I'm having is that my buff orpington, Arnold, might be going broody. She's normally pretty docile. She pecks my feet when I have the audacity to try to do chores outside without first giving her a treat, but she's otherwise very gentle and sweet. Recently she's begun screeching and puffing up at me when I happen to check the nesting box while she's in there and she's taken to biting us if we touch her while she's sitting in there. I've noticed she's been spending increasing amounts of time sitting on the fake eggs, tucking them under her, and generally disrupting everyone's routines by refusing to get her butt out of the box, bc of course all four of them insist on laying in the same box (except when the fake eggs aren't there, because that means it's time for everyone to go lay eggs in the hedges). She sounds like she's going broody to me but idk this is my first batch of tiny dinos.