Whew:My Avian Ecology class () has an 8 am outdoor lab on Fridays.
So with a Thursday overnight low of 13°, the 8 am temp should have rocketed up to, I dunno, 17° or so?![]()
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Whew:My Avian Ecology class () has an 8 am outdoor lab on Fridays.
So with a Thursday overnight low of 13°, the 8 am temp should have rocketed up to, I dunno, 17° or so?![]()
Hypocrisy is the word that springs to mind.All I'm asking is for people to be careful of their use of adverbs in particular, have knowledge of the dictionary definition of the words they use in mind because that is what most of us will understand the word to mean and be honest in their reporting.
There is a lot of useful information on this thread and I really don't want people reading the posts that are not honest portrayals of their chickens behaviour and leaving feeling inadequate because their chickens are not the angels a misleading post may suggest.
i'm not a lodger but i do peep in the windows. i'm glad you reopened your house.When I first joined BYC (I will refer to BYC as Chicken Town/TC for here on) like many I suspect I wandered the streets looking at the various threads (I will refer to these threads as houses) for somewhere to stay. I stayed at the town pond for a while and sat on a Lily leaf. I moved into the town Cafe for a while, even made the morning coffee on occasions. I visited the various craft shops and started my own. I had a brief look in the various churches and spent a few hours looking around the old peoples home. I met lots of welcoming people, made a few friends in the various places I visited but the desire to have my own home in Chicken Town led me to building my own house, Shadrach’s Ex Battery and Rescues house.
I wanted a house where chickens could come and go, much like my house In Catalonia and most of all, I wanted a house that was rooster friendly.
I built the house made a plan on how to run it and opened the doors. More lodgers than I expected moved in. They came from all parts of the world and the house grew. Some lodgers moved in and moved on, some lodgers moved in and stayed. Overall the house functioned very well. The lodgers paid their rent in chicken tax, bar a few who were to chicken poor to pay and the vast majority of lodgers seemed to appreciate the house atmosphere and evictions were rare.
It seems from the conversations I’ve had with the lodgers that closing the house down has made them homeless and some have said they will not be coming to chicken town as often as they did and others are not looking forward to being back on the streets.
I don’t want that, despite the difficulties I’m having maintaining the house, it’s not the fault of the lodgers. I don’t want to be making people homeless in chicken town.
I’ve reopened the house and hope that the lodgers will help maintain the house while I deal with the problems I have outside chicken town.
I didn't post it, but I felt that BYC wasn't the same without this thread. It's the first one I check when I sign in.When I first joined BYC (I will refer to BYC as Chicken Town/TC for here on) like many I suspect I wandered the streets looking at the various threads (I will refer to these threads as houses) for somewhere to stay. I stayed at the town pond for a while and sat on a Lily leaf. I moved into the town Cafe for a while, even made the morning coffee on occasions. I visited the various craft shops and started my own. I had a brief look in the various churches and spent a few hours looking around the old peoples home. I met lots of welcoming people, made a few friends in the various places I visited but the desire to have my own home in Chicken Town led me to building my own house, Shadrach’s Ex Battery and Rescues house.
I wanted a house where chickens could come and go, much like my house In Catalonia and most of all, I wanted a house that was rooster friendly.
I built the house made a plan on how to run it and opened the doors. More lodgers than I expected moved in. They came from all parts of the world and the house grew. Some lodgers moved in and moved on, some lodgers moved in and stayed. Overall the house functioned very well. The lodgers paid their rent in chicken tax, bar a few who were to chicken poor to pay and the vast majority of lodgers seemed to appreciate the house atmosphere and evictions were rare.
It seems from the conversations I’ve had with the lodgers that closing the house down has made them homeless and some have said they will not be coming to chicken town as often as they did and others are not looking forward to being back on the streets.
I don’t want that, despite the difficulties I’m having maintaining the house, it’s not the fault of the lodgers. I don’t want to be making people homeless in chicken town.
I’ve reopened the house and hope that the lodgers will help maintain the house while I deal with the problems I have outside chicken town.
