Shadrach's Ex Battery and Rescued chickens thread.

I need to go back and read this whole discussion on feed when I have more time. Mine get non-GMO, organic, soy-free, corn-free feed and I always check the mill date (once had to take some off date since they were out otherwise.) The chickens still get lots of cancer, laying disorders, and fatty liver. Laying status seems to correlate with age and time of year. Sorry to be throwing out a comment when I’m not properly caught up on the discussion yet.
Seriously don’t. Just don’t. I mean don’t waste your time or sanity reading the threads on how feed is affecting laying.
 
Interesting day. 7C a light breeze and overcast.
There was a small amount of the pellets I left last night left but they hadn't had any other food, nor had the geese. Everything was exactly as I left it.
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I got the cleaning and water done straight away and had them out on the allotment for a couple of hours.

These past couple of weeks with the chickens being on the allotment is much closer to how I think chickens should be kept. I dug, they spread and debugged.
Lima needs keeping an eye on because she dashes off to find something new, or back to the bush she's been excavating. There are tiny worm like bugs living around the roots of the bush and there are lots of them.
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This is my new plot. In the rough on the right are a couple of raspberry bushes and a gooseberry bush. There is also a fruit tree of some variety growing. I'm going to plant in the left hand side down to where Henry and the hens are standing in the first picture.
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That's Fret rearranging my weed pile. She's just checking.:D
There were bits of board partially buried along some of the edges. The chickens and me with a spade can keep the edges clean. They shifted quite a lot of soil this afternoon. They weren't interested in the worms I dug up; three different types of worm.:confused:
Fret and Ella eat slaters (a type of wood louse), Lima will eat a couple and decide there are tastier things it seems, and Carbon won't touch them. Carbon out of all the hens is the most nervous about being out and often goes back to just inside the allotment run gate and watches the others. She was a bit more confident today.
Lima has decided that standing on the fork edge is the best way to ensure she doesn't miss anything.
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Something alarmed Fret and Lima while they were under their favourite bush and they ran/flew back to the allotment run. They were fast enough.

Fret laid went to lay an egg and when she had finished she stood on the coop ramp and called for Henry. Henry was out on the allotment with me. Henry responded and went to collect her. This is the first time I've seen Henry do a proper escort job. It seems that in both the coop run and allotment run are considered safe by Henry and he doesn't bother collecting the hens. On the allotment itself is different even though the distance between him and the hen may be less.
I also saw Henry herd Ella. He doesn't do that in the runs; he hackle flashes them.
A good day was had by all I think.
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It's nice to see that with that much less chickens their quality of life seems to have quite improved. And that their behaviour is changing some.
Do you have any contact at all with C. now, or any idea one way or the other what their intentions are for the chickens ?

I have to put a reserve on my initial enthusiasm with the chickens in the garden thing. Now one of our four free rangers is an adult rooster his ability and strength digging huge holes has become a problem. We are wondering how we will deal with it when we start sowing and planting - netting is not enough to refrain them and we don't want to put again a fence around our garden when we just took it down two years ago.
This is in the banty coop today and the dirt bath the adult Son and I made.
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I didn't realize you had fancy bantams ! Do they ever mix with your other chickens or are they always separate?

Edit : dig tax
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indeed, but the stuff Chicken Canoe was referring to was 3 YEARS expired, not 3 months old.
I don't buy any so-called balanced commercial feed, so I already know that it is not necessary to a chicken's good health, or egg production, or fertility.
This topic seems peculiarly liable to misunderstandings.
I just think it's important for these kinds of topics where conspiracy theories erupt and bits get ommited in reporting to have a reference point of what actually happened, or was written, and often overlooked, where it was written.
It's that interesting problem of mixing politics with chicken keeping being wonderfully demonstrated.:p
 
And that their behaviour is changing some.
Do you have any contact at all with C. now, or any idea one way or the other what their intentions are for the chickens ?
It's the behavioural changes that I find fascinating.
Ella for example wants out as soon as I arrive. She was very unsure in the first few days. She dug a lot this afternoon. She found stuff as well. As I keep writing, I beleive all that digging is really good for chickens. It requires a lot of effort. It's like heavy leg work in a gym, it raises the heart rate, extends and contracts muscles that on day to day wandering about don't get put to use.

Yes I still have contact with C but only face to face now if possible. Currently C seems to have left the chickens to me which is fine by me. C has mostly stopped feeding them so they aren't costing them anything. I do the chores and the meds and get them out under supervision daily.
My new plot will mean I'm likely to spend more time there. Nobody else apart from C and one other couple are making use of the place.
Treat the chickens well and enjoy myself at the same time for as long as I want for £30 a month is better than any club I can think of.:D
 

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