- Nov 1, 2012
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Thanks for the detailed reply. That was helpful and full of some great ideas. I guess I will just wait until they are a little older and a lot bigger. I'll still try to have more supervised times here and there, but not rush it. Right now at least they are together but safely together and getting used to each other. I am just impatient.Long integration description... probably boring for many... ignore if uninterested...
I normally don't integrate mine until they are about 5-10 weeks old - depending on the size and breed. They are next to each and will run together during the day when outside, but they know where home is and sleep separately. My setup is one that requires rotation to a new "sleeping home" with manually opening doors as they mature until they are finally in the main room of the hen house at about 5 months old with a timed dusk and dawn door.
So... baby brooder (low heat lamp, draft free, 0-2 weeks), intermediate brooder (higher heat lamp, open on 2 sides, free range only with constant supervision, 2-5 weeks), teenage room (no heat lamp, 5-10 weeks, free range with while periodic checking on them), small half of hen house (just like adults but separate roosting), large half of hen house.
This doesn't include various breeding runs and tractors, this is just a general description of integration.
By 12 weeks the roosters are separate from the main group into the bachelor pad, so from 12 weeks til about 5 months it's only pullets in the group which makes a LOT less conflict.
If I do have one who insists on being a problem, she goes in the crock pot.
As with all animals here... you must have shoulders, you must have a job, you must not fight.
(Rams and bulls are no exception... you play nice together or you don't stay! period!)
Some make lifelong friends right through the chicken wire... they will also roost together after they are combined and always be together while free ranging. And often these are unlikely pairs, but who I am to decide who should be buddies.
When the day finally comes to integrate a group of teenagers into the laying hen side, I always move several (never just one, sure sign of disaster), and I make note of who the buddies are. I move them after they have gone to roost at night and always attempt to place buddies next to each other on the new roost..
Weird... but it works... the pullets who have laying hen buddies integrate like they've always been there. The remaining tend to stay in a group and after the first day of watching them I have never had a problem with them all getting along by the time they come back into roost that next night.
