aaggjg
Songster
- Sep 29, 2011
- 1,071
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Some of her runners had a bit of East Indie in them.The female is very loud. The male does quack but I find it sounds a bit raspier like my male(Whom im thinking might not be a pure runner. he looks really big and round to be pure. I know you said some of the runner eggs had a chance to be mixes. He looked pure runner as a baby but now he looks more like rouen-ish in body or pekin. He looks just like my other two. no tall lanky runner look
You might try "deep litter"-ing your run. Just throw in any leaves, grass clippings, kitchen scraps, etc. and that will build up the soil and attract good bugs. At least in the worst bare area. It might help & won't hurt. Some people also build little raised beds out of 2x4's and cover with chicken wire, to grow greenstuff. They can eat the greens but not scratch them up completely.
Most of the bare areas are under the pines, and it has been so droughty this year. just dust. I have been putting hay, leaves, weeds from the garden under the trailer coop and in part of the bare dirt, but it is just scratching heaven for the girls.Lalala start throwing down grass clippings, weeds, leaves, pine needles, whatever you have in your bare areas. It will break down and replenish the nutrients in your soil. If you could block of a part for a few weeks you could throw down some seed and let it grow. I was thinking like the stuff you put in your garden when it's finished for the year (sorry I forgot the name of it) but clover would work also
Sorry for your loss.Well.... I'm about ready to give up on this whole free ranging thing. Which means that I'm about to give up on this whole keeping laying hens thing... Lost TWO chickens today. Assuming to the fox. Both the cornish that I was keeping to breed from, and, much worse, the buff orpington chick that I hatched from my pair this spring. I'm down to my rooster, one hen, three pullets, and the cockerell that we're probably slaughtering in the fall with the turkeys. I'm so discouraged. Tried the game camera, a trap, walking my dog around the perimeter of the property. I've lost seven chickens in two months. Turkeys and meat birds are safe in their tractors. I don't have a run to shut the layers up, and I don't really want to keep my chickens confined to a run. With the way the shed we converted to a cook is situated there's no way for me to build a run that I would consider spacious enough, not to mention a fox proof bird containing run would be expensive. I'm at a loss. And heartbroken over the cheeplet.
Quote: Than I do not have a single suggestion and i wait for more information and knowledge when you get your test results.
I am sorry you are going threw this.
I might have to cage my silkie male by himself..he will not leave any birds alone. He is trying to breed even chicks for crying out loud, I have never had this before.There is power in my barn and chick house. I keep some lights on in the breeder pens because the inside of the barn is so dark even with all the windows. There are six cockerels housed separately in there right now. Even with the boys penned together there was so much fighting between the top boy and the lower ranking (all others) That blood and wounds were becoming common. When I was at Catdance Farm, I saw she kept all her extra roos caged alone too. This makes for more work for me at watering and feeding but there is peace now and the wounded boys are healed and their condition has improved a lot. Makes it very easy for me to change up my breeding. I can put a hen or two with who ever is next in line without removing the roo from his cage.
I won't use this method with the HRIR. Top cock will run with all the layers with one roo in reserve.
I really like having individual lights in each cage in the barn. Power switch is off at 7 pm every night after closing up time. I have very low voltage bulbs. No hens are in the barn during the day except to lay. In the chick house I don't use any lights. It has a greenhouse roof and windows. I heat chicks with a porcelain 250 w bulb meant for reptiles for chicks up to three weeks. Off during the day. On during the night.
There are motion lights on the outside of my barn next to the porch. I would like another set out where the turkey hoop coop is.
bluemouse, sorry to hear that. Once a fox finds your flock, I've never heard of anyone successfully free ranging without LGD's. I managed for 4 years, and then, had to build a run. It is time and epense to build a run, but you can make it as big as you can afford (fencing). Mine is bigger than my house, and has 5 fully mature pines in it, plus some other trees. I do lose a hen to hawks about once a year or so. after 5 years half of the ground is bare dirt and in the half that still has grasses, all the edible weeds like dandelion and clover are long long gone. I don't think it will take that long for the last half to go, plus the dirt just doesn't seem healthy to me - if you dig into it, there aren't a lot of bugs. I know it is time to plan on building a new coop and fence in another run. I'm lazy, I hate the idea of putting down new fenceline, and honestly, money is tight so it will take me a couple of years to be able to do this. So, time and money....but I am going to start collecting the stuff i'll need (fence, wire, posts, and a shed.