Quote: I have sensor lights in a rooster decor at the coops door and one at a pole near the coop. They were the garden stake ones but my dogs broke the stakes. I like having a light to see my way to the coop a night.
I was thinking of using one of those battery operated light you push to turn on inside the coop when the days are shorter.
And on a good note by next spring the electric netting should be on solar power and I should be able to use it for the heated dog bowls in the winter also which means no electricity in the coop and off the grid so no extra costs for electricity
Ok I am camping but we found a Mennonite store and made some great finds. I got coconut oil cheap, raw honey & raw milk from the dairy.
Anyone have any good ideas what I can do with the raw milk besides drink it? I have a quart of it but can get more before we head back home. Pm me if you do. Thanks
Who knew I would find such a great area. Sure wish I could move up here so close to the Amish & Mennonites
beautiful area
raw milk is a great score..
take home extra and freeze it..
your chickens and FF bucket will thank you!!
So....the the little Fav pullet didn't make it through the night, DH buried her this morning. Could not get a stool sample, and DH did not want me to cut her open. Sending stools for the rest to a friend in Vet tech work to look at, just to make sure nobody has anything (I couldn't see anything, but a second opinion is always good). The others are all eating like mad and growing like weeds though. This little one was very close to the one killed, since she kept the Fav from getting picked on too much. Thank you again to everyone who offered help.
sorry..
Kassaundra: you mentioned caponizing in a previous statement. Can you tell me a little bit about the procedure? Did someone train you? Is it difficult to learn? At what age do you do it? And does it completely eliminate the rooster sparring and breeding behavior? Would it be worth while to do with the few males that show up as accidentals from sexed chicks, or on 3 - 6 roos? I've read descriptions of the process, but it sounds a bit difficult for a novice to learn from "book learning"... If I thought that I could have caponized the 6 roos I ended up with this spring, it would have prevented a lot of coop drama, and allowed me to keep them until they achieved a respectable wt before going to freezer camp. If my questions are too much for this forum, feel free to PM me.
Kass has her own thread for all your information.it is very good..enjoy!
https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/675898/graphic-pics-of-my-day-learning-to-caponize