Hahaha! Sure, you'd be welcome if you lay an egg a day and are friendly!The roof is pretty well insulated, since it has about 5" of dirt on top, plus snow on top of that!
I feel like an idiot for asking, but why the dirt???
If I'm ever a chicken, can I come live at your house? And if I were your chicken, I'd lay you an egg every single day too!!!![]()
Also, I need a saw. I have to use what I have the way I have it.![]()
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Yeah, I should have probably said more about the dirt. I built a chicken house that will have a "living roof." I saw it in a shed book I was looking at while designing my coop and loved the idea. The coop sits a little below our house, so I thought it would be fun to look down on it and see flowers and grasses growing on the roof. We just built it this summer, though, so nothing is planted on it yet. We just have a tarp over the dirt, held down by pieces of wood to keep the dirt from washing away in the spring rains. Next summer, though, we'll have stuff planted in it! I thought it would be crazy fun if the chickens flew up to the roof and grazed up there! I don't think they can fly that well, though, and anyway, there's plenty of easier greenery to eat.
And what are you doing without a saw?!? IJK - I didn't have one until we decided to build our house (wanted to live in the country, but couldn't find any place that hadn't been logged horribly until we found the piece we ended up buying. The access is awful, which saved the trees, mostly. No house on it, though, so we had to build our own. My mom's first present to me after we decided to build was a compound miter saw. Yay for moms! I love my saw!!
My chickens don't seem to like to eat the turkey and chicken pieces I put in their run. But my dog sure does! The hardest part is keeping her out of the run - she wishes she were a chicken because they get all the best treats (in her mind, at least). The turkey does disappear, but I'm never sure if the dog snuck in when I wasn't looking, or if the chickens ate it while I wasn't looking.AFL - when you give them a turkey carcass, do you have any concerns that they might get a small piece of bone or something that would get stuck in the crop or hurt them in any way? I still haven't been so bold to give them a cooked carcass for fear of bone splintering or some such thing.
Oh, goodness! Just start here and do your best to keep up from now on! That's hard enough. You can go back and read through it as you have time, but we don't want to have to wait until you read it all before you join the conversation! If you say or ask something that's been said or asked before, no big deal. My memory is so bad I probably wouldn't remember anyway, and it doesn't seem like anyone here would get their panties in a bunch over that...LOL, I was just thinking the same thing! I am on page ten, and plan to read the entire thread, might not hear from me for awhile!![]()
Oh, I'm so sorry. It's the worst part of having animals, and never seems to get easier.I don't think she will be. I plan to cull tomorrow night. She was really bad this evening, but I did get some food into her. Also culling that blind rooster. He's not gaining weight like he should. Sigh... Sometimes having a farm sucks... I get attached to the ones I try to get better, but I will be strong and end their suffering.

I just read this to my husband, and he heard the peeled feet and said he thinks he can live without "super nutritious bone broth."I take the bones, and sometimes I re-roast them, then I put them in a big pot of cold water (if you have bleach in the water it is probably best to filter it, but we have well water here), with the peeled feet (and I've been told the head is good to toss in there, too, but I haven't braved that yet), and I simmer it for a day. I add some carrot and celery and garlic and onion and spices, but that isn't necessary. Then I strain it. Then I have super nutritious bone broth.
If I use the crock pot or stainless steel, I also add in some vinegar to help draw the nutrients out of the bone. But I don't do that in an aluminum pot. I need a bigger stainless-steel pot.
