Shadrach's Ex Battery and Rescued chickens thread.

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This is Quartz, a keeper. He's from that one rooster I liked last summer, so it's great to have his kid. 20250727_130726.jpg
Kiddo wants to keep the stripy boy too, but I don't know how many we can keep.
 
Tax cause I am probably behind and if not then these are just lovely chicken pictures.
Ayam Cemani rooster 21-6-25.jpg

My rooster on his crowing stump. Phone camera is bad quality I know, I do have those chats a while back with recommendations saved for when I need a new phone.
Meat pullets 17-7-25 (1).jpg

In the meantime my pullet has continued to lay normal eggs and shell less eggs. She does still go inside on top of the table, which I think is her trying to lay an egg. And maybe they are just gone because of shell less and rolling off the table? Anyways she is still super active, healthy looking and acting!
Fibro test month old chicks .jpg

Chicks are a month old in this picture. Now the question is can you spot the only rooster chick? Supposed to sexlinked with both fibro inhibitor and barring (also inhibits fibro), but his comb has darkened up quite a bit.
 
I really don’t want to have a third group here.
Sorry you're dealing with this. I've had 2 males who hurt hens. The first time was the toughest. I culled him and haven't gotten over it emotionally (pains me to admit it, but it's true).

He's the bird in my avatar, Cogburn, a big Light Brahma. We were close. In some ways I can't forgive myself for culling him, but I also don't regret it. It saved the hens from living in pain and fear. They were being injured repeatedly and going into hiding when they needed to be foraging and dustbathing and filling their crops for the evening.

Unlike Big Red, Cogburn was also incredibly aggressive to humans 😳 which limited interim housing options. Euthanizing him was the kindest of the choices I felt I could make for him and the hens, even if it brutalized my spirit.

During the time we were trying valiantly to make it work with BurnBurn, we built him a compact, mobile coop, Cogburn's Clubhouse, so the hens could at least roost in peace. That meant we already had emergency space when the 2nd hen-aggressive rooster, Andre the Giant Chicken, tore a big chunk of skin off Miss Barbara's neck.

Andre ended up in Cogburn's Clubhouse, chatting up the hens through his movable net fence for 18 months before I finally finished raising pullets to hopefully integrate with him. They fell in love immediately, so DH and I begrudgingly added a more permanent third section to the chickenyard.

Andre did rip into Lil Nugs' neck once when she was about 6 mos old. I saw it happen, pulled him off of her and immediately closed him in his run so I could consider whether he would truly ever be safe around them.

Apparently he was considering it, too, because after I cautiously let him back out for supervised time with the girls over the next week, he'd turned back into a big sweetheart and never injured them again.

I think it helped that, though the girls met Andre while they were chicks to hopefully do some kind of imprinting, they weren't alone with him until they were fully feathered, self-assured pullets. That meant Lil Nugs responded to Andre with righteous indignation instead of cowering the way she might've if she'd always been abused.

Anyway, this was a long post even though I've left a lot out, but it felt germane to share. Best of luck.

Oldie-but-goodie videos of my social engineering with Andre and the Speckles.

 
I have been eating the flat snow pea (peultjes in Dutch) since childhood. My mother grew them in our veggie garden. When I had my own garden I grew them too. They are a not for sale in the supermarket. Some vegetables shops sell them in the season.
I often let them grow are a teeny bit older as in the photo. To eat them I take off the ‘thread’ on the side.

Sugar snaps are a bit different, sweeter, were introduced much later and are probably commercially more interesting. The supermarkets sell these in season and frozen.

Typo
Since we are talking about names, I want to mention that sugar snap peas are called "Dutch peas" in Chinese.

Tax
Light visits me in my office
20250715_153056.jpg


Inky
20250710_193546.jpg
 
Since we are talking about names, I want to mention that sugar snap peas are called "Dutch peas" in Chinese.

Tax
Light visits me in my office
View attachment 4184252

Inky
View attachment 4184253
So weird people all over the world seem to use the word Dutch for all kind of things that aren’t Dutch at all.

Tax, a neighbours bantam Sussex with the chicks she hatched from bought eggs.

IMG_7364.jpeg
 
So weird people all over the world seem to use the word Dutch for all kind of things that aren’t Dutch at all.
Historically this sort of thing often indicates how or via whence the speakers were introduced to the thing named after them, so I imagine the Dutch East India Co. has something to do with it.
 
Sorry you're dealing with this. I've had 2 males who hurt hens. The first time was the toughest. I culled him and haven't gotten over it emotionally (pains me to admit it, but it's true).

He's the bird in my avatar, Cogburn, a big Light Brahma. We were close. In some ways I can't forgive myself for culling him, but I also don't regret it. It saved the hens from living in pain and fear. They were being injured repeatedly and going into hiding when they needed to be foraging and dustbathing and filling their crops for the evening.

Unlike Big Red, Cogburn was also incredibly aggressive to humans 😳 which limited interim housing options. Euthanizing him was the kindest of the choices I felt I could make for him and the hens, even if it brutalized my spirit.

During the time we were trying valiantly to make it work with BurnBurn, we built him a compact, mobile coop, Cogburn's Clubhouse, so the hens could at least roost in peace. That meant we already had emergency space when the 2nd hen-aggressive rooster, Andre the Giant Chicken, tore a big chunk of skin off Miss Barbara's neck.

Andre ended up in Cogburn's Clubhouse, chatting up the hens through his movable net fence for 18 months before I finally finished raising pullets to hopefully integrate with him. They fell in love immediately, so DH and I begrudgingly added a more permanent third section to the chickenyard.

Andre did rip into Lil Nugs' neck once when she was about 6 mos old. I saw it happen, pulled him off of her and immediately closed him in his run so I could consider whether he would truly ever be safe around them.

Apparently he was considering it, too, because after I cautiously let him back out for supervised time with the girls over the next week, he'd turned back into a big sweetheart and never injured them again.

I think it helped that, though the girls met Andre while they were chicks to hopefully do some kind of imprinting, they weren't alone with him until they were fully feathered, self-assured pullets. That meant Lil Nugs responded to Andre with righteous indignation instead of cowering the way she might've if she'd always been abused.

Anyway, this was a long post even though I've left a lot out, but it felt germane to share. Best of luck.

Oldie-but-goodie videos of my social engineering with Andre and the Speckles.


I’m very sorry you had to go through that :hugs . Glad to read that you made it work with Andre, and he turned into this handsome gentleman we all have loved seeing.

It’s very hard to euthanise and/or cull birds you never thought would have to leave your property. I’m no stranger to culling, but Big Red is my baby, the only bird I’ll ever call that, and I’m incredibly sad to see him go. At the same time, I feel like I’m also to blame in how he turned now, considering how I chose to raise him, following the advice of some gamefowl keepers (not on BYC).

The last video of Andre is very touching. I love how calm he is about letting the pullets peck and preen him:love. That is another thing that’s really sad to see with Big Red. It seems like he thinks everything is transactional. Every time he calls for food, he expects to mate. With all three boys being on edge, the girls have not enjoyed a peaceful dust bath in quite some time. Yup, both Big Red and Elrond will try to mate the hens while they are dust bathing. Like Shad said, one would expect a three year old to have more composure.

Thank you for your post, HiEverybirdy. It’s very nice to read about other peoples experiences, whether they ended successfully, or not. Sorry for beautiful CogBurn, but you did everything you could:hugs
 

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