Shadrach's Ex Battery and Rescued chickens thread.

This batch of chicks are different in their behaviour towards me than the last that pair Fret hatched. This could be because Fret is a lot more trusting, to the point of giving me a gentle warning peck, rather than immediately moving off with the chicks or going full battle order.:p It's more "don't do that you're upsetting the kids" kind of peck.:rolleyes:

I don't really want lap chickens but being able to catch and handle them if necessary is a great help. It's finding that balance that I find difficult. They don't all respond to the same way to attempts to befriend them.

When it comes to my job as part of the team, making sure the chicks have sufficient food and water is routine. The bit that never seems to be rountine is negotiating the ramp to the coop. All the full sized coops I've built have been off the ground, so all have had ramps. It's been rare in my experience when doing the make sure the kids get home at night bit, for at least one and often all to give a distress call as soon as I capture one. Then mum barrels out of the coop... Now you've got one hand holding the chick and the other trying to block mums attacks.

This lot, not a peep. Keep my hand low, slide it under one and it steps onto my palm. They wobble a bit during lift, but didn't panic.:p
Maybe they'll grow up more friendly than Dig and Mow.
😍
This confidence is really nice.

I have a broody now too. Bought 6 bantam hatchery eggs yesterday.
Stil wondering how many eggs will fit.
Black lays approx. 35 g eggs and 7 Dutch sized eggs fit under her without any problems. The bantam Amrock eggs are much larger. All between 50 and 55 g. But I think I might be lucky because it seems Ini mini want to co brood.

Pearl an Tintin still together the whole day and night. Tintin is 2 months old now.
IMG_4976.jpeg
 
For those interested, I've just published an article reporting on the year and updates to my feeding regime. It's here
https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/wholesome-homemade-feed-2.79307/
I've been planning to do it for a while, but with yesterday's thread in mind, https://www.backyardchickens.com/th...d-layer-feed-with-no-treats-delivers.1625904/
I thought it better to publish now than wait for the anniversary on 5 June.
Good you make your own decisions on food. The layer feed maffioso may have their own opinion, but I cant agree with their idea that giving anything else as layer feed is balanced and the best.

I don’t thrust the ordinary feed either. But the organic feed in combination with free ranging and scratch should be okay. Having healthy 9 and 20 yo chickens says enough imo. Making my own is lots of work and would be much more expensive.
 
layer feed is balanced
what none of them will engage with is that there are significant inconsistencies in the ME figures given for the raw materials. They write as if the numbers were written in stone, not that they vary with the raw material, the methods of testing used, the birds they run the tests on etc. etc. This paper from 2020 reviews a century of making these calculations, and suggests the whole system needs a rethink.
http://dx.doi.org/10.3382/ps/pez511
 
I'm in-between taming chickens as pets and a total hands-off approach. I am the giver of grapes, and my first bunch, the Sussex, will land on my lap if I possibly have treats. The Dominiques are a little skittish but willing to eat from my hands. I wasn't able to spend time with them napping on me as the older Sussex made it difficult.
Here, it really depends on the pen.
This batch of chicks are different in their behaviour towards me than the last that pair Fret hatched. This could be because Fret is a lot more trusting, to the point of giving me a gentle warning peck, rather than immediately moving off with the chicks or going full battle order.:p It's more "don't do that you're upsetting the kids" kind of peck.:rolleyes:
These kinds of reflections are cool, maybe because they show nuances in how we respond to our chicken charges, and how we can naturally take different approaches with different individuals.

AGC is part of a group of chicks with whom I was uncharacteristically hands-off. They were more standoffish than previous chicks, and I found myself respecting their space. Plus they were straight run from a breeder, and I didn't want to accidentally over-coddle baby cockerels and turn them into monsters.

An obvious cockerel chick, I handled AGC the least, and the result was our most aloof chicken...until he started flying out of the yard at 18 months. Since it could take an hour to retrieve him as he barreled down the mountain towards the neighbors' dogs, I thought I'd see if I could get him comfortable with being handled.

Food offerings work wonders. We quickly ended up with a rooster who demands wattle rubs. Like your Big Red, @fluffycrow 😊

I used to worry this kind of behavior could result in a rooster feeling the need to boss around me or other humans. DH is a target for rooster aggression because he's kind of an aggressive rooster himself 😄. Game recognize game. But AGC is extremely patient with humans, and DH and AGC are great friends.

I've posted this before, but it's an oldie/goodie.
 
This is true. I should probably point out they're only skittish with strangers-cum-predators. They come barrelling towards me like a certain someone's avatar if they think I come bearing gifts :D

I have lost count of the number of photos of idyllic scenes ruined by my opening the door to take a photo, whereupon they all drop everything and come charging over! :gig:th
It's an important point. If the hens were already aware that human-shaped animals have the potential to be useful/kind to them, then their new keepers probably could've won them over with a few weeks of treats, if they wanted to put the time in 🤷‍♀️

Edited to add: I'm not trying to start something by using the word "treats" in reference to non-commercially processed consumables offered to chickens 😄 Your articles and posts about feeding are thought-provoking and sparking important conversation. Thanks for taking the time to share your experience.
 
We are going to block them from the pond, my heart couldn't take it. Just when I think they are too smart to do it, they go and do something completely insane. Tonight, all the girls bunched into one corner of the run, climbing on top of each other, trying to get closer to us, when we were over chatting across the fence with the neighbors and meeting this year's baby goats. 🙄 They can't be trusted with water.
We'd not thought much about chickens and water until recently. Our only body of water is a seasonal creek. It's small and runs 6 months a year. The chickens rarely regarded it until the Speckled Sussex came along.

The Speckles don't believe in fences so range where they darn well please, including the field with the creek through it.

At first, Peck was so wary of water she'd make a large loop to take the land bridge to the other side of the creek. Starla would simply fly to the other side.

Lil Nugs, however, taught them they can not only wade through the water...

DSC00671-2.jpg

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...they can bob for things in it. Salamanders, snails, crawdads, drowned grubs...


Nugs ended up extra hydrated instead of catching this particular grub. That's okay; she'd probably dug up 2 dozen already that evening. The grass is thriving thanks to their help this year.
 

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