Rocky64
Chirping
- Jan 25, 2015
- 649
- 39
- 94
Can someone tell me what age is typical for dubbing a rooster?
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i already dubbed that bird I posted a few pages back with frostbite. His was the worst and it wasn't bad enough to come apart at all. I won't let them get that bad.The frostbite, unless caught early or allowed to drop off makes the dubbing process nasty. The necroding tissue combs off as you handle comb and wattles to trim.
hope they all hatch for ya. I have a few broody hens but it's way too cold still to let em set. I wish I could have gotten an earlier start but it ain't looking like that's gonna happen. Ice storms are terrible. That's worse than the cold and snow.Driving me nuts! Lol no the first batch is quail size and the second batch has just got their wing feathers developed. I have noticed that the ones with the best character so far are Albany/Hatch cross. I have another batch hatching Friday, some are under a hen and the others are in a bator. I'm hoping this ice storm hasn't hindered the hatch rate from the hens eggs, we another wave of ice coming through again tonight.
i already dubbed that bird I posted a few pages back with frostbite. His was the worst and it wasn't bad enough to come apart at all. I won't let them get that bad.
Thanks for the information.I usually did it at about 10mo but have been taught recently more likely better to wait till a year or so.
Thanks for the information.
Interesting comparison.It is like harvesting hog oysters; you let them mature enough so one makes a decent sandwich of covering you a good sized cracker.
hope they all hatch for ya. I have a few broody hens but it's way too cold still to let em set. I wish I could have gotten an earlier start but it ain't looking like that's gonna happen. Ice storms are terrible. That's worse than the cold and snow.
well that particular birds comb was still pliable and relatively soft. Hasn't been frost bitten too long.It not that you let it get that bad, rather it is how far along the necrosis process has gone when you dub. Generally, that first night or day it happens is the worst it gets with respect to what will ultimately fall off. Assuming no infection.