Beautiful Silkie

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Angel, my Silkie, will be in a nice cozy stall next to an insulated wall with thick bedding and a nice big Rooster (my Giant, Zeus) to keep her warm. If that doesn't work, I can turn on the heat lamp which is mounted on the wall. Thank you people we bought this farm from!Mine have been through zero to minus 3 F with no problems. I do not light or heat their coops. They just need a draft free and DRY shelter with lots of thick bedding, I use straw, and they will pile up together on the floor. They also lived through the extreme drought and heat here this past summer, although I did lose two of them to the heat, even when watered down and misted throughout the day. They do better in the cold than they do the heat I feel.
No. I have a 3 month old, she's kinda grown, she has her adult feathers.Do you mean a grown silkie living outside?
ok, so bantams will be less I'd think, right? I have to do 2 different coops this morning. Hopefully it isn't too late. I didn't have time to get it done before dark yesterdayI hope I didn't lose more birds.
I always love seeing them on the grass.
I use liquid. Ivermectin is given by weight of the animal. I would not use more than a bebe size for a bantam. We used about 3 pea size on a large chiuhauha dog and had to take it to the vet when it started shaking all over. It did survive though.it is the paste instead of the liquid. it is the 10% like the goat one, but this one is the paste for horses. Any way to administer it and measure it out? it is all I could find.
I wouldn't suddenly put one of any age out in freezing cold but if they are adjusted over time they will be fine near zero degrees if kept dry and free from drafts.Angel, my Silkie, will be in a nice cozy stall next to an insulated wall with thick bedding and a nice big Rooster (my Giant, Zeus) to keep her warm. If that doesn't work, I can turn on the heat lamp which is mounted on the wall. Thank you people we bought this farm from!
No. I have a 3 month old, she's kinda grown, she has her adult feathers.
I use shavings, leaves, and grass hay in my deep litter. My chickens turn it so frequently it hardly ever compacts. A few times a week I throw a couple handfuls of BOSS and Scratch over it. My chickens all love to pick through the grass hay. They eat it and take turns pulling choice blades away from each other. I do not use straw. It can harbor lice and mites and takes too long to break down in the litter. Good mold is what breaks down every thing into a richest compost you can imagine. I suffer terrible allergies but going out into my barn doesn't bother me at all. All of my pens are deep litter systems.Not a bad mold.
Moldy leaves have been used to mulch gardens for many years.
Not all molds are bad.