- Thread starter
- #11,341
They are not mine to take anywhere.Couldn't he take them to his daughters?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
They are not mine to take anywhere.Couldn't he take them to his daughters?
With my mental health issues it's quite apparent I'm going to need a lot more than two; 19 will do for the moment.Yes, but with your mental health issues you need two emotional support chickens, one rooster and one hen. Surely they allow emotional support animals![]()
No, I took them down. They seemed inappropriate on reflection.These attachments aren’t visible to me. Are they still up?
Yes in one of them.Shad, I believe when I first “met” you on the forums, you were writing a book. Weren’t the chickens speaking to each other in your stories?
She is acting normal, just has that lump. And hasn't laid an egg in 2 ½ months.I hope the vet can sort Skeksis out. I found it quite stressfull having a sick chicken and not knowing what the problem was.![]()
Even though I’m rarely able to be around my flock at roosting time, I always go out and do a head count later. If a straggler has decided to sleep in a tree, that was their choice, but my new place doesn’t have big enough trees for that to really be an option. Fortunately everyone is pretty good about getting to bed, so it’s rare that I have to go looking.Poor feathered friends! So glad you discovered they got locked out and dried them off..
I quite liked that one with Fat Bird!Yes in one of them.![]()
Read a Jack Reacher novel. He always manages to get the job done without receiving life threatening injury.I'm begining to feel like the cowboy in those films that rides into some no name town and tries to teach the smallholders how to fight the bully rancher.I'm going to have to watch a few more of these films to assess the chances of survival before I take the job on.
![]()