Jspartans26
Chirping
- Oct 22, 2020
- 39
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It might be, maybe plant some kind of winter cover crop would work. Although it might not if it’s buried in snow

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youd be surprised how hard it is to find their hidden nests, even if you do some general poking around haha.-Central Texas
-This is the first winter and they are doing fine so far. There is shelter available to them should they want to use it.
-I'm getting a small percentage of the eggs. I *could* get more if I wanted to hike the hills every day, but I don't.I know the general area that some of the hens frequent and I'm pretty sure that I could find eggs if I looked around some.
No accidental clutches yet, but I hope to see some in the spring.youd be surprised how hard it is to find their hidden nests, even if you do some general poking around haha.
how many accidental clutches of chicks have you had?![]()
I’d expect in northern climates, you’d need to supplement in winter...either with some combination of fodder, grown grains (corn, wheat, etc), finely cut hay, long-storage veggies like pumpkin and squash, compost piles, food waste, or chicken feed.
E) Somehow you have no predators that have found your birds