Thank you, they can't see each other. There is a divider between the 2 breeding pens.
Duh!

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Thank you, they can't see each other. There is a divider between the 2 breeding pens.
Thank you, they can't see each other. There is a divider between the 2 breeding pens.
Duh!I didn't even see that! Some days I wonder where I left my head....
That's an awful nice big space for breeding pens! I like that. I hate the thought of penning my free rangers into small breeding situations when they are so used to ranging...they just pace when they are confined for long. I'm hoping to make small, lightweight hoop coop mobile breeding pens so I can give them fresh grass each day but it will still feel like a prison to them, I know.
I like the idea of just flock breeding for now until I can wrap my mind around small penning these wild and woolly birds.
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I am glad you started to breed them sooner rather than later. I think in the long run you will be glad you did that.![]()
That's an awful nice big space for breeding pens! I like that. I hate the thought of penning my free rangers into small breeding situations when they are so used to ranging...they just pace when they are confined for long. I'm hoping to make small, lightweight hoop coop mobile breeding pens so I can give them fresh grass each day but it will still feel like a prison to them, I know.
I like the idea of just flock breeding for now until I can wrap my mind around small penning these wild and woolly birds.
I also will just be flock breeding for now. My plan is over the next couple years of flock breeding I will see what direction my Silver Penciled Plymouth Rocks are moving in and in what areas they will be needing the most help. I can definitely see things in them I want to improve on now but before I go into single mating breeding pens I first want to get good numbers on the ground.![]()
I am glad you started to breed them sooner rather than later. I think in the long run you will be glad you did that.![]()
Thanks TomAgain, I apologize for slowly creeping thought the entire thread. For the record, this is the first time I have seen a large fowl Columbian win Best of Breed in an open show... EVER!
GREAT JOB GUYS!!! Anything other than a White is rare.
For those who are homesteading, shall we say, with bred to Standard fowl, the breeding pen idea does may sound a bit constraining. Perhaps it would help if you consider that the birds only need to be confined during egg collecting and hatching season. This is only a smaller portion of the year. This is done is ensure purity and to be selective about which cockbird mates with which female to advance your selective breeding goals. Without selective breeding, one could own some of the finest birds on the planet and entropy or degrading would take place at an amazing pace and soon, one would own a rather shabby, ordinary flock of birds. This isn't breeding but mere propagation.
I may also be helpful to arrange for a breeding area where space is more abundant more to your sensibilities.
All this becomes much, much easier when the breeder hunkers down and focuses on only one breed. With each breed added, these space and pens and coops issues magnify.