The Moonshiner's Leghorns

Leghorns have proven to be a very intelligent breed, similar to Games, and my 4 juveniles I just turned out to free-range have already learned to roost in trees, and have learned quickly to come to me at feeding time and where the community water troughs are. They have taken to free-ranging very well and happily chatter on and on, picking and scratching. My husband was amazed at how quickly the Game hens taught them to get in a tree. They just watched the hens and followed them up into the trees on the first night.

People will say they are skittish and flighty, as are Games. But in reality, they are just "street smart" and very predator savvy. They are fast and flighty by nature to avoid predation. It's very interesting how similar Leghorns are to Games. I am betting Games are in their ancestry somewhere. I would have to research that, so don't quote me on it. The similarities in the two breeds are uncanny, and our Game eggs look identical to our Brown Leghorn eggs.
Im finding my Spitzhauben and Spitzhauben Ameraucana crosses are very intelligent. Took the current 6 grow outs one day to figure out free ranging, coming in to the pen in the evening and roosting with the flock. I was rather amazed at it. They ten to come when called as well.
 
marans chooks are like the thouroughbred horses you can t focus on spead and forget the stamina and conformation .balancing the art of the mating to produce better progeny ,not put all the effort on breeding one trait ,you end up broke .
most marans breeders around the word they want dark eggs doesn t matter if they are laid by a crow ,that fine by them ,
for me every trait is important and I ll give it a time ti understand it and breed it true ,
all about balance , for any pair to produce a better progeny than them self , they have to complement each other ,
for us as breeders it s our job to find who compliment who ,

thank you all for the kind words ,Blessing to ya all

Ozmarans
I can't agree with this enough! You taught us in the Marans thread about balance in the breeding pen and I will never forget that. It has proven true many, many times in the progeny I have hatched. I loved your view about not throwing out a line because of its faults, but instead to breed what you have and try to work with the best of the birds you have. I use that wisdom to this day when selecting birds for breeding, and mating a complimenting bird to another as balance to improve faults. When you would critique a bird, you would not only mention its faults, but you would also mention its good qualities, and I keep that mentality to this day. "What good does this bird have to offer?" versus "nope, it has this fault or that fault, throw it out!"

You are a wise man Joe, and an excellent breeder. Many compliments and much gratitude, sir.
 
My husband and son mow grass as a side hustle and they have had to work around the rain.
Well on the days it isn't raining there should be plenty of work.
I laughed at the guy that mows at the barn a few weeks ago because it wasn't even close to needing mowed yet.
The last few weeks I think he's been mowing twice a week. If I had a nice big zero turn mower I'd love to mow for a side Hustle.
 
Im finding my Spitzhauben and Spitzhauben Ameraucana crosses are very intelligent. Took the current 6 grow outs one day to figure out free ranging, coming in to the pen in the evening and roosting with the flock. I was rather amazed at it. They ten to come when called as well.
That is awesome! I have no experience with Spitzhauben and limited experience with Ameraucanas but intelligence in a breed like that is very important in my opinion. Just as importance as any quality such as egg color or phenotype. Intelligent birds produce progeny that will adapt to free-ranging, which minimizes losses to predators because the birds don't act dumb and sleep in a pile in the middle of the yard like some of my heavier birds have done in the past when juveniles. Instead, they instinctively roost where they are safe, elevated, and off the ground.

My little Leghorn rooster runs to me every time he sees me, making the pullets follow suit. I think that is sweet. He knows "hey there is that human that feeds us!" lol
 
Well on the days it isn't raining there should be plenty of work.
I laughed at the guy that mows at the barn a few weeks ago because it wasn't even close to needing mowed yet.
The last few weeks I think he's been mowing twice a week. If I had a nice big zero turn mower I'd love to mow for a side Hustle.
We don't have the cash for a zero turn or riding mower right now, but one of these days we will get them one for their side hustle. My son uses a self-propelled push mower and he is young, so it's nothing for him. My husband does the weed-eating. The grass in the yards they mow is pretty high by the time they get a break in the rain. They have to mow our neighbors lawn today and its going to take them all evening. lol Luckily I am on a break from school so I have been doing the feeding and taking care of the animals.
 
Even roosting in trees nothing is safe on property. The coons are to smart and desperate.
Our LGDs keep the coons and other varmints away, thankfully. Even our neighbors LGDs basically live here so we have like 4-5 dogs on our property at any given time. Our two Anatolians and our old Pyrenees, and at least 1-2 of our neighbors Pyrenees. We butchered 5 roosters yesterday evening so all of the dogs got a meal of raw rooster leg quarters, keels, and shanks/feet. They love butcher days because they love raw poultry on the bone. They know what's happening and constantly beg the whole time. lol We keep the breast meat for ourselves and feed the rest to the dogs. They work hard so they deserve it. My husband and son cat fishes with the gizzards, hearts, livers, and other organs like kidneys and even rooster testes so not much of a bird goes to waste. lol
 
One more thing that is fascinating about our free-ranging Game hens is they not only get into the trees to roost, but they get as high up as they can possibly go, and go out on little tiny branches. That is intelligent because a heavy predator can't get to them because the branch would break and the bird would escape. We almost never lose a Game hen to predators. We almost never lose any birds to predators, though. LGDs are truly worth their weight in gold once you get them trained and out of their pup stage.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom