123farm
In the Brooder
- Sep 9, 2015
- 20
- 4
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ok, I should have read first.... the link is great! I am so glad it has photos.... thank you!
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My birds are wild and impossible to catch during the day. So I do all the handling and checking at night. They're easy to pluck off the roost, look over and return.As far as the pelvic bones, besides being very hard to catch and check close to 100 hens, I read that the pelvic bone measurement is for egg laying potential and not actual laying quantity. I need the group average to be higher than 50%. I would like to see 70-80% (if I have 100 hens, I am getting an average of 70-80 eggs per day). I am in southern California so I might be able to catch them before production slows for winter if I can get these doors made in the next two weeks. right? It goes by daylight hours and we still have 12-13.
I'd either go with all RIRs or no RIRs. If egg color isn't important, and white eggs are ok, in So. Cal I'd go with Leghorns, Anconas, Minorcas and Hamburgs. If you need brown eggs, some of the other breeds I mentioned would be good. Penedesencas are great layers of extremely dark eggs.The RIR are bullies! For God knows what reason, the old manager order a run of fancy chickens this summer. Thought they have the sweetest temperaments, they serve no purpose on this farm. Most of them are sultans and the RIR's pluck out all of their head feathers... its hilarious looking, these poor guys with grandpa bald heads. I have decided on a British? folding door design, with a trip wire and small stoppers glued to the back of the door so they cannot swing it the other direction and get out. I will post pictures if it works. This way anyone who just wants to modify their current nest boxes rather than build all new ones can do the same... if it works. We'll see. Thanks a bunch guys. I appreciate this community here.
I have handled them at night and it's like a dream come true. It is just hard for me to get here at night (this is work) because I have two young kids and my husband and I work opposite shifts so our little guys can be with at least one parent at a time instead of daycare. If this were my home flock, checking them at night would be easier. If my trap nesting idea doesn't work, I will try the manual inspection. As far as RIR's, we have a lot of them. I think the old manager ordered 50 chicks last summer. We lost a few along the way, but they still make up the majority of the flock. I was assuming that the ongoing feather eating and plucking was because they aren't getting enough protein and I know they have worms (we are trying to deal with it now), but maybe a lot of it is just bullying from those guys. Our barred rocks can get a little mean sometimes too. Egg color doesn't matter at all since they are just used in a restaurant, so I will look into the suggested breeds for future flocks if we don't go with an heirloom breed. Thanks ChickenCanoe.My birds are wild and impossible to catch during the day. So I do all the handling and checking at night. They're easy to pluck off the roost, look over and return.
I'd either go with all RIRs or no RIRs. If egg color isn't important, and white eggs are ok, in So. Cal I'd go with Leghorns, Anconas, Minorcas and Hamburgs. If you need brown eggs, some of the other breeds I mentioned would be good. Penedesencas are great layers of extremely dark eggs.
WAY TO GO READING EVERY POST!!! I couldn't keep going after about 24 pages. Impatient I guessGreat thread!
I read every post last night ... Now I'm thinking of adding this concept to a front roll out design when I build mine ... Kinda like theses, but collection on the front ... https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/287684/new-rollout-nest-design-picture-heavy-edited-1-21
MANOZ,
That was a great series of pictures of the egg laying process!
Thank you for the time and effort you took to share your interest in this, hopefully you will be back around here soon!
Great thread!
I read every post last night ... Now I'm thinking of adding this concept to a front roll out design when I build mine ... Kinda like theses, but collection on the front ... https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/287684/new-rollout-nest-design-picture-heavy-edited-1-21
MANOZ,
That was a great series of pictures of the egg laying process!
Thank you for the time and effort you took to share your interest in this, hopefully you will be back around here soon!
WAY TO GO READING EVERY POST!!! I couldn't keep going after about 24 pages. Impatient I guess![]()
They are in a run that is 60x60 feet, so 3,600 square feet, about 36 square feet per bird. In the coop, we have two coops, one with 12 boxes, the other with 16. There are no greens left in the area, so they might be bored.123,
How crowded is your flock?
If the 50 RIR's were added last year I would send the rest to freeze camp ASAP. That would reduce feed costs and most likely reduce feather loss.
Have read any of the threads on fermented feeds?