Shadrach's Ex Battery and Rescued chickens thread.

Because I probably owe tax & if I don't I eventually will.
This is my Vet's rooster free ranging round the surgery.​
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Does he do the injections?
 
You may have noticed the view in the picture above and the picture in the post before that are a similar view. That's the gate in both pictures.
The place was so overgrown when I started. I weeded the entire side and left the patch on the right under the trees to provide shelter/cover.
In many places in the allotment run the weeds have just been cut back with a brush cutter. This just makes the weeds grow back stronger. I prefer to weed by hand if I want the area to stay reasonably clear.
 
all stages of the mealworm lifecycle are edible for chickens, and so are their shed skins and their frass. I don't know about quantities - presumably @MaryJanet can advise on that - perhaps including on any differences we should observe between live and dried mealworms...?
I give live mealworms once or twice a year. Lettuce maybe twice a week, and we all share an apple most days.

Keeping the treats to a minimum makes sure the hens tank up on proper food.

There's been discussion about grains and pellets.

I don't want hens with fragile livers grazing selectively through grains, so they eat the highest protein pellet I can find on the market. It's available 24/7 in 4 different feed stations (one for each hen).

Once a day, before roosting, the hens are offered their usual pellets in a mash with the dietary supplements added.

This dietary routine wasn't easy to establish among hens who were used to tanking up on treats and snacking on grain. They weren't happy. I stayed tough and they adjusted over a long time.

Now they're healthy as can be.

Janet and Mary are 3 and a half, Peggy and Ivy are 2 and a half.
 

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