Silkie thread!

I do blow dry him after he has a bath when he gets muddy. I will dry him off with a towel if he is just damp.I know that they are sensitive to being cold and wet, so I tend to worry about him catching cold. He does have a covered area in the yard, but spends most of his time helping the dogs guard the house and looking for bugs. I am thinking about converting an old dresser into a chicken house for him as well.

What I discovered by accident with my backyard free-ranging chickens -- I used a half plywood sheet propped on cinderblocks to shade the chicken water and feed but I saw the chickens dive under it when a hawk flew into the patio plus they took afternoon snoozes under the shelter too (rather than go into their shaded pen). I decided to set a pop-up canopy with legs buried in the ground so it doesn't para-sail in the wind. Under the canopy I set their water, feed, dust bath area, and several large recycled old doghouses. They use the canopy as shelter from the rain, from the hot summer sun, and the doghouses also shelter from rain or wind. We scattered a couple more plywood shelters on cinderblocks, used cedar lawn furniture and benches, potted plants, trees, etc, anything that will shelter them from rain, wind, sun, or visiting Cooper's Hawks (haven't lost a Silkie to a hawk in 5 years and they will be just 5-feet away but won't go after a hiding hen). I also noticed the hens like to hug the fence or house when foraging rather than being in open areas so all the shelters, canopy, and doghouses are close to the fence line with furniture and potted plants filling up the more open spaces. I have one hen that likes to snooze/hide alongside my black compost bin; another one likes it under the stickery rose bushes. Still in heavy and cold rain I don't let the chickens out in the yard. They just have to be content to huddle in the coop and pen on those heavy rain days which don't happen often here in SoCal.
 
When do you guys feed laying pellets to your Pullets? Mines are about to be 5 Months but they look so small
They do make the layer crumble that would be smaller & easier for your pullets to eat. From what I have heard usually after they start laying is soon enough
1f60a.png
 
They do make the layer crumble that would be smaller & easier for your pullets to eat. From what I have heard usually after they start laying is soon enough
1f60a.png
So I should wait a bit more?
I would, they don't need the calcium until they start to lay. In fact the extra calcium is not good for young birds. Even if you just open a new bag of reg. feed then they start to lay. They will be fine to finish the bag. Just begin to put out oyster shell on the side & they will be fine.
 
I'm so excited to say my silkie laid her first egg yesterday. At just 8months :)

At least I think its her, my speckled sussex still has yet to lay and it was tiny.
 
I'm so excited to say my silkie laid her first egg yesterday. At just 8months :)

At least I think its her, my speckled sussex still has yet to lay and it was tiny.

Our Silkie eggs for 5 years have consistently been 1.25-oz. Once in a blue moon we might get a 1.3 or 1.5-oz but very rarely. Though Silkie eggs are smallish I don't consider them "tiny" but maybe next to a jumbo Sexlink egg maybe they might appear so.


Marans dark egg 2.4-oz, White Leghorn bright white egg 2.5-oz, 2@ Buff Leghorn tinted eggs 2.0-oz and 1.8-oz, 2@ Silkie tinted eggs 1.5-oz and 1.25-oz
 
I would like to share that my beloved paint silkie's eggs consistently weighed in at 1/2 the weight of a large egg from Meijer grocery store so I used two of her eggs for every one called for in a recipe. Her eggs were beautiful and every time she laid one I hugged her and thanked her for nourishing me. Sadly she was attacked by probably a hawk two weeks ago and I miss her terribly. I loved her so dearly. She was kept indoors but that morning she wanted to go out and I let her I wish I could roll back time and not have let her out.
 
Our Silkie eggs for 5 years have consistently been 1.25-oz. Once in a blue moon we might get a 1.3 or 1.5-oz but very rarely. Though Silkie eggs are smallish I don't consider them "tiny" but maybe next to a jumbo Sexlink egg maybe they might appear so.


Marans dark egg 2.4-oz, White Leghorn bright white egg 2.5-oz, 2@ Buff Leghorn tinted eggs 2.0-oz and 1.8-oz, 2@ Silkie tinted eggs 1.5-oz and 1.25-oz
Thank you Sylvester017 for the pictures, I love the set up there. My egg is tiny, hopefully it does get bigger because it was her first egg. But comparing it to my polish tophats who do not lay large eggs, it is very small (she is a very petite hen). I do not have the best laying group, I was foolish and picked my birds for beauty instead of productivity
big_smile.png
i'm sure paying for it lol. Next I would like a maran, I love those dark eggs.

mammabird724, I am so sorry to hear the lost of your beloved silkie. I know how sad it is to lose our birds, we grow very attach to them. Do not regret letting her go outside, at least she had the chance to enjoy the outdoors and even if a hen has a short life its good that she had the best of a life and love a silkie can have :)
 
I would like to share that my beloved paint silkie's eggs consistently weighed in at 1/2 the weight of a large egg from Meijer grocery store so I used two of her eggs for every one called for in a recipe. Her eggs were beautiful and every time she laid one I hugged her and thanked her for nourishing me. Sadly she was attacked by probably a hawk two weeks ago and I miss her terribly. I loved her so dearly. She was kept indoors but that morning she wanted to go out and I let her I wish I could roll back time and not have let her out.


That breaks my heart! So sorry! I lost 3 of my 4 silkies to a bear last month. That set me off on a crazy spree to hatch as many of their eggs as possible... and now I have 13 babies, of which 9 are silkies.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom