Shadrach's Ex Battery and Rescued chickens thread.

food preferences when chickens moult.
My heavily moulting Janice definitely prefers grapes and mealworms. (They all do)

I don't know much about mushrooms and there are a few of these growing.
IMG_8076.jpeg

big sheath mushroom, rose-gilled grisette, or stubble rosegill

I used a Dutch app to identify (obsidentify developed for schools and free, no garbage/ads ), then searched for the English name by using the latin name.
 
I'd be extremely wary of using an app to identify mushrooms for anything more than entertainment purposes - especially an app developed in a different country that might not have the same species growing there.

And a single photo often isn't enough for an accurate ID.
 
Douglas firs make good roosting, I think. They provide good, dense, evergreen shelter from wind, rain, and owls. Once they hit 30 or 40 years old, their lowest branches could be 10-15 feet up. I don't know if a raccoon can climb vertical up a tree trunk, but I haven't seen it.
The European pine marten definitely can climb in trees.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_pine_marten
I'd be extremely wary of using an app to identify mushrooms for anything more than entertainment purposes - especially an app developed in a different country that might not have the same species growing there.

And a single photo often isn't enough for an accurate ID.
This app is very honoust in its reliability. If the photo is not clear or if it resembles another mushroom/plant is gives possible alternatives and a low percentage of reliability. And in general the more common species in England and in the Netherlands are the same.

This photo gave a 100% score.
I have been using this app in collaboration, for my work as a volunteer at the national trust Renkums Beekdal too. https://www.renkumsbeekdal.nl/herfst-welke-paddenstoelen-zag-jij/ .
 
About two and a half hours this afternoon. I couldn't describe the afternoon as dry because everything is damp from the downpours yesterday and overnight. But, it didn't rain this afternoon and the sun shone.🌞

Sylph so far isn't looking as distressed as her sister Mow did when she had her first hard moult last year; she was a pitiful sight. Early days. A few feathers in the coop, lots more in the coop extension.
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Glais is growing spurs. The nubs have opened and little white spur tips are showing.:love
We had over two hours out and about. This area is a new area for Glais. He's slowly getting to know his territory.
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Glais has started giving I've found food calls. So far Sylph and Mow haven't been impressed.:D He's going to need to find something really good if they're going to respond by checking what he's found out.
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What Glais did find was a mushroom and he ate some of it. If he's sick or dead tomorrow that will be why.
I don't know much about mushrooms and there are a few of these growing. Apparently there are two similar looking types, one is poisonous the other isn't. This isn't the type that Glais ate some of. By the time I got to what he did try it was unrecognizable for identification.
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They are still having some roosting disputes. Sylph likes the place Glais is in and went to roost early and settled there. Glais bullied her off. Nothing too aggressive I hasn't to add.
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I had a chicken, who on two occasions suddenly became paralyzed and I thought she was dying. Her legs gave out and she just couldn't walk. However, after 20 minutes she got up and continued on her way completely fine. The first time I didn't know why. The second time I just happened to see she and all my other hens rush across the yard and gobble up a similar looking mushroom to yours before I even saw it. Apparently she had some sensitivity to it where the others did not as they were fine. After that, I kept the free range yard clear of mushrooms and the paralysis never happened again.
 
Do you know, is that the same or different from volvariella gloiocephala (which = stubble rosegill, last entry of BDutch's 3)?
big sheath mushroom, rose-gilled grisette, or stubble rosegill
these are three different species. The last is described in Phillips' Mushrooms field guide as "edible but careful identification is needed to avoid confusion with deadly, white-spored Amanitas (pp. 140-152); the latter have rings but these may become detached." Phillips p.155. His guide has no entry for a rose-gilled grisette, btw, but grisettes are aka amanitas, which most foragers avoid, because the family includes a few highly toxic types and you really need to know your mushrooms to distinguish them.
This app is very honoust in its reliability. If the photo is not clear or if it resembles another mushroom/plant is gives possible alternatives and a low percentage of reliability. And in general the more common species in England and in the Netherlands are the same.

This photo gave a 100% score.
100% score for what? That it is one or another of the 3 suggested? I could say it is right, or wrong, and be 100% accurate on that reckoning :D
 
I had a chicken, who on two occasions suddenly became paralyzed and I thought she was dying. Her legs gave out and she just couldn't walk. However, after 20 minutes she got up and continued on her way completely fine. The first time I didn't know why. The second time I just happened to see she and all my other hens rush across the yard and gobble up a similar looking mushroom to yours before I even saw it. Apparently she had some sensitivity to it where the others did not as they were fine. After that, I kept the free range yard clear of mushrooms and the paralysis never happened again.
Why deny them all something they want to eat because 1 of them is temporarily incapacitated by eating it? If humans did that there would be no alcohol industry (amongst other things).
 
The European pine marten definitely can climb in trees.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_pine_marten

This app is very honoust in its reliability. If the photo is not clear or if it resembles another mushroom/plant is gives possible alternatives and a low percentage of reliability. And in general the more common species in England and in the Netherlands are the same.

This photo gave a 100% score.
I have been using this app in collaboration, for my work as a volunteer at the national trust Renkums Beekdal too. https://www.renkumsbeekdal.nl/herfst-welke-paddenstoelen-zag-jij/ .
I would never, ever, rely on an app to properly identify mushroom types. To do so, is, not just in my opinion but in the opinion of expert mushroom foragers, an invitation for a potentially life threatening disaster.
Where I lived in Catalonia, mushroom foraging was extremely popular. Every year one could see people with little baskets scouring the woodlands and pastures for mushrooms; whole families often involved. Every year while I was there, someone died from eating the wrong type and many more got sick.

I've been out in the woods with an elderly women many at the local village describe as a witch; the good type I should add. She was highly regarded and local people would go to her for remedies for various complaints for which this witch would make up a potion. Judging by her reputation many of these potions worked. The knowledge she had acquired over the years of walking the mountains looking for herbs, roots, flowers and mushrooms was absolutely staggering.

The one single bit of advice I got given by this women when walking in the mountains with her is don't consume anything without getting an expert opinion on the type of whatever it is one found, especially mushrooms.
 

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