that part... totally give me the williesThere is in my opinion too much time between us now and T Rex or any other animal that lived 65 million years ago. Our air is even different now... different foods different disease....
deb

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that part... totally give me the williesThere is in my opinion too much time between us now and T Rex or any other animal that lived 65 million years ago. Our air is even different now... different foods different disease....
deb
Penedesenca are chickens from the Penedes region in the autonomous community of Catalonia in Spain. They and the Empordanesa from the Emporda region, also in Catalonia, are the only chickens in the world with white earlobes yet lay a brown egg. They're also the only ones that are supposed to have a carnation comb. The brown egg is one of the darkest eggs in the chicken world.I'm curious what Pene eggs are? Chicken, turkey, duck or what?
I've done it both ways several times. In the same coop works quite well and the hen will definitely protect them. The best reason to segregate them is so you can feed the chicks the proper feed.... I have a question about hatching eggs in the same coop with other chickens. I have a broody on 9 eggs right now and I think she will take care of herself but wondering what anyone thinks. I hate to move her but will if I have to.
Is the C or F?I kept a bit of heat in the coop through the coldest spots, it was maybe -10 in the coop at the coldest, -20 outside. But the broodies and chicks did fine there. We've been pretty lucky with the temperatures this winter from a chicken perspective, it's been a lot warmer than usual. But as long as you can keep water liquid for them, I think they'll be fine. Make sure they're eating though, we just lost a broody mama who had neglected that part.
I use bricks for steps for chicks getting them in and out of the coop. I have some coop entrances that are 2+ feet off the ground.a quick wire partition to contain the chiks is easy to do... leave enough space for momma to get out and eat and dust bathe At first shes just going to want to get her strenght up to manage them Wild Chilluns. I kept my partition up till I could see the chicks easily hopping up on stuff and getting into trouble on their own
I had smallish birds at the time. A barnyard mix of Bantams and EEs. So I had to make chick ladders every where ....which were stacks of bricks or rocks or a board to help them get over the sill of the aviary door.![]()
Oh and because I use those big black feed tubs for water, I did a wire insert inside to raise up the level of the floor so if a chick fell in they would only be ankle deep. Lost one chick that way... Those tubs had to have steps too.
deb
Quote:
yep.... Human insulun first cloned in 1978 And that was before Jurasic park was written.
http://www.gene.com/media/company-information/chronology
They used E-coli as the host I believe
deb
Lot's of good information from everyone! Now I'm back to thinking about just leaving them where they are. The food is a factor for sure because you can't segregate it. I've tried that and it didn't work. The only that would or might work is if I put the chick feed in the main coop and the adult food in the open area with the all the goodies in it. They don't like the food with no corn to pick out so they might leave it alone.
That was an interesting story about the Pene chickens. Pretty cool! I wonder how many different breeds of chickens there are. I had never heard of that kind before. The fanciest chickens I have are a BCM and a Blue copper marans, Otherwise the only ones that aren't mutts are a B.O. and B.R. I also have an OE and a EE and few others. Thanks everyone. I'll let you know how it turns out.
@Puddin Fluff
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