Mumsy, I hope you all are doing okay there after the big landslide today. It's great your chicks made it safely and that your chicks are hatching.
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Thank you. Coupeville is twelve miles up island from me. No one I know is affected. My daddy always told me, "Don't build your farm in a flood plain, at the waters edge, at the base of a mountain, or on a cliff." Words I've lived by and taught my grown kids. I have a daughter in Coupeville. A half mile inland from those cliffs. Those sand cliffs that are sliding today have been sliding into the Puget Sound for millennia. Really bad idea to build houses on top of those.Mumsy, I hope you all are doing okay there after the big landslide today. It's great your chicks made it safely and that your chicks are hatching.
Hey there mumsy: you seem to be as much of a camera buff as I am. Not a great photographer but I do love taking pictures of all mine.There is NOTHING wimpy or weak about the Ron Fogle chicks! The two week old shipped chicks enjoy their groceries. They lick their dishes clean in a very short amount of time. Gave them some scrambled eggs so I could try and get a picture with them not moving around so much.
I took nine out of the incubator this morning. Beautiful dark red and chunky chicks. Good uniformity of size, strength, health, and disposition.
Just out of the egg twelve hours ago. That is what I'd call "a handful of chick!"
RIR come in rose comb?!?!![]()
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So glad I took a peek in this thread. My only experience with RIR was over ten years ago with what I am now guessing was a "production red" hen. She was the meanest thing and soured me on the breed. Guess I have to give Mr. Horstman a shout out and find a couple of these true RIR --- with rose combs...![]()