SFIcelandics
Songster
- Jul 18, 2009
- 457
- 6
- 174
Quote:
So to be on the safe side we shouldn't keep them with the other breeds than?
Personally I would keep them apart. This year when I pulled my hens from the roos, I did some test hatching, and the eggs were still 75% fertile after 3 weeks of no rooster!!! I usually pull all of my roosters from the flock 4-6 weeks before I want to start hatching chicks. In the winter time I run all of the chickens together in the same barn, and then once it comes time to split them up, the roosters go to the back half of the shed, and the hens stay in the front with the bigger run.
Come breeding time the welsummers have had the biggest pen I have(100' x 100'), and do great in there, but during the winter most of the birds get put into my smaller 2 pens attached to the main adult barn.
So just to be safe I would reccomend keeping them seperate.
Nate
So to be on the safe side we shouldn't keep them with the other breeds than?
Personally I would keep them apart. This year when I pulled my hens from the roos, I did some test hatching, and the eggs were still 75% fertile after 3 weeks of no rooster!!! I usually pull all of my roosters from the flock 4-6 weeks before I want to start hatching chicks. In the winter time I run all of the chickens together in the same barn, and then once it comes time to split them up, the roosters go to the back half of the shed, and the hens stay in the front with the bigger run.
Come breeding time the welsummers have had the biggest pen I have(100' x 100'), and do great in there, but during the winter most of the birds get put into my smaller 2 pens attached to the main adult barn.
So just to be safe I would reccomend keeping them seperate.
Nate