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I was going to do the Exchequers plus the 3 hens I hatched last year all in the hoop coop with a NH rooster. To make things interesting, I'm going to switch out roosters each week and collect all eggs for all 3 of those weeks. That way not all chicks will have the same father, for what that's worth.When you do proceed, what are your plans? Cross the Exchequers with the NHR rooster again to make more chicks? Try to get more hens and a roo for the back-crossing phase? (Which at this point, the best we could hope for is next spring. Even if your coop was functional tomorrow, it would take a few weeks for the DNA to set, a few weeks to hatch the chicks, and then at least five months to grow the babies to laying. Sooooo . . . like they'd be mature next December maybe? At that point you'd have to wait until Spring to hatch more! Argh! The waiting is so ughhhh.
This is all so very strange to me, because when I had the Exchequers all those years ago, they were super reliable egg laying MACHINES. I had the hens for about 2 years, and they were my most reliable layers in all weather.I was going to do the Exchequers plus the 3 hens I hatched last year all in the hoop coop with a NH rooster. To make things interesting, I'm going to switch out roosters each week and collect all eggs for all 3 of those weeks. That way not all chicks will have the same father, for what that's worth.
Unfortunately even December is optimistic with these guys. The Exchequers are REALLY slow to do everything. Slow to start laying (they didn't start until 8-9 months), first to stop laying in fall and last to start again in spring. So even if I could start tomorrow, it would be next March/April before I'd have the next set of eggs to work with. ughhhh is absolutely right!
Wow, HEChicken! We still have more rain to go, but our electricity is holding up. I hope it stops raining before I head to bed so I won't have to worry about chicks in the brooder. That's the great advantage to having them outside with broodies. It just doesn't matter what the electricity does. I just wanted them more up close and it's hard to get my hands on chicks when the broodies are caring for them. I'm going to break down and let them brood next year.