Quote: Is there a hatchery that sells marans cheaply? At some of the prices I saw this morning, I would be able to get in line for breeder stock and I don't really want breeder stock. I just want some to raise and sell as laying hens.
What do you mean by cheap? most hatchery's are around $6-8 for Marans.
I seen that this has been addressed.I was discussing this with my husband last night and a few posts on here reminded me of it.
I am wondering if anyone has a good idea about what could be planted to feed chickens as their staple diet combined with foraging. Something that could be grown without any grow lights, hydroponics, etc. either out side or in a greenhouse and that could be grown in sufficient quantities to feed through the winter.
Any ideas? Not about to do this by the way, just wondered if it was possible!
I posted this in the Indiana Thread. But I would welcome gender opinions on the bird front and center and the bird on the right.
I was able to get a not too bad picture this morning of the chicken I got from Brad. I'm thinking it is 1 rooster and 1 hen for sure but there are 2 that are much smaller than the roo and might be hens so gender guesses are welcome. The coop is going to be repainted this spring, sorry for the messy walls and roosting bars.
The one under the roosting bars is female. The dark one closet to her is the roo. It is the splash chick in center and the dark one on the right that I'm not sure of.
Sorry about the picture quality. I'm not the best with a camera and it was really really cold this morning too.
These are hard to guess sex by the pictures. I see saddle/sickel feathers on one bird.
Quote: If they are hungry they shuld eat anything. They need a good food removal to get them hungry enough..a hungry bird is a healthy bird. It keeps them active and busy.