I am now remembering that during last years Easter hatch I had decided that the next time I did the hatch a long I was going to set a few days early so when everyone else is getting pips, peeps, and chicks, I would worry sitting here with mada movement or pips. So if one of you kind fellows would remind me next next year I would be much obliged.
And the winner of the Short Story Contest is..............
Pele
Congratulations! You have won $65 worth of feed coupons courtesy of Nutrena!
Oh my goodness!! Oh my goodness!! HELP PLEASE!!!!
I got to work today and I have an early pip in one of the three eggs that actually made it to lockdown! My problem is, I am attempting a staggered hatch for the first time and I had intended to use my other bator as a hatcher, but I just can't seem to get my s*!t together enough to get the bator into town and get it set up... So I took 2 rails out of my turner and set the eggs on the floor of the bator and jacked up my humidity... Anyway... this morning, I find that one pip, but the turner has gone nuts and tipped the eggs too far, so now I have eggs falling out of the turner and the turner seems to be stuck because eggs are jammed up against rails not allowing it to turn back the other way....
What to do?? What to do?? What to do???
PLEASE HELP!
Have a rir chick with his head bent back and laying on the brooder floorHe was the one that I had been watching because he was so unresponsive like the other chicks, I made sure to give him some water and show him food/water etc,.. but all he wanted to do was lay against the container and not really even peep.
What should I do? I picked him up and tried to get him to respond but he is just breathing and I believe barely alive.![]()
And now she's being spoiled by Linda, which is normal for her birds. Anyone who places a bird with her knows they'll have an amazing life.Noahsmom, Sparkle is a newish addidtion to my flock. A family in the East Bay area posted the need to rehome a year old silkie hen which had been bullied and picked at so much by their flock and another who tried to integrate her into theirs with the same result. I responded because I had a special needs, thrice rescued from being picked upon, WCB Polish rooster in the house. I guess I passed the test, because they gave her to me. We met in Sacramento for the exchange.
I bought a diaper for her because I wasn't going to put her into my flock after she'd suffered feather picking twice, already.
Sparkle resumed laying within a few days, then went broody in the brooder bin I set up for her safe haven in my second bedroom used as my office, plus incubator room & chick nursery last year. I tucked some of my flock eggs under her. (Her eggs weren't fertile; no rooster access.) She hatched four chicks and did not take them out of the brooder bin for two weeks. So, she's been in the house seven weeks, but only the first two of those weeks were "free access" to the whole house. She mostly stayed in the office, which has been a chick brooding room before. Every day the weather was nice, she would go outside to be a regular chicken in the garden, but her coop is the whole house.
She has, and will have, access outside onto the deck and into the fenced garden right off that deck. Sparkle just isn't a flock chicken.
Chicken diapers are a fantastic solution to the problem most folks have with the concept of a House Chicken. Had she not gone broody, she would have worn it daily.