I've heard that one too, LMAO!I grew up being told they’d drown in the rain if they looked up!![]()

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I've heard that one too, LMAO!I grew up being told they’d drown in the rain if they looked up!![]()
Our chickens love the rain!My hens never seem particularly angry when they're wet ("madder than a wet hen")
I have 1 Roo that was very grumpy when he got soaked in the rain...but really he is a moody boy at other times, even on a sunny dayOur chickens love the rain!
Well I me they can’t fertilize eggs but truly they can chang their gender. That is kinda how girls crow. I guess it is up to the person. Never seen a flock balance it’s for boys and girls though. Only had a girl flock and then a hen-roo.Here is one I almost forgot, I heard long ago...
The guy said that a bird can change it's gender AFTER it has hatched...so they adjust themselves for a balance ratio of male & female birds in the flock. This sounded crazy to me...I mean once it is hatched, it is what it is...even as embryo, gender is already set by the genes.
I believe it can be manipulated to a degree by the hen, as the egg is being formed within her, and possibly by how she incubates her eggs, but once a chick Pecks out of the shell, it's either a Hen or Roo at that point, right?
I'm not saying birds won't occasionally "act" like or have some type of feathering similar to the opposite sex, but they are not going to physically change gender AFTER hatching.
https://theconversation.com/how-birds-become-male-or-female-and-occasionally-both-112061
https://animalogic.ca/wild/6-surprising-animals-that-can-change-sex
The theory...while Hens are sitting on eggs, they can figure out if more Hens vs Roos are needed, and can adjust their incubating techniques & temperature accordingly. It does not actually change the gender in the egg. While a slightly lower incubating temperature (1degree) did show in artificial incubator lab tests, that Less Male Eggs Successfully Hatched Out, there is no definitive proof this is consistent when using incubators, and no proof at all as far as a broody hen hatching eggs, as we can't constantly monitor hen body temperature, of exactly how warm she's keeping her eggs. (I guess a determined scientist with expensive equipment could.)
I also tried the shape of the egg idea, I wanted to hatch eggs anyway, figured it can't hurt to try...all perfectly round eggs.
10 round eggs...
Hatched out 5 hens & 5 Roos.
Lesson learned!
https://www.fresheggsdaily.blog/2016/04/the-secret-to-hatching-hens-not-roosters.html?m=1
I know hens can crow, but they can't successfully fertilize eggs creating offspring with another hen.Well I me they can’t fertilize eggs but truly they can chang their gender. That is kinda how girls crow. I guess it is up to the person. Never seen a flock balance it’s for boys and girls though. Only had a girl flock and then a hen-roo.
Er. Dont the eggs eventually rot and explode, question mark. Sorry, dumb google pixel five this morning has decided instead of giving me punctuation it will give me a numerical pad. Sigh.Yeah, they found that's not an effective control strategy. The geese just decide that's an unsafe site and start over again somewhere else. If you oil the eggs the geese may sit the whole season trying to hatch eggs without being able to. They do the same thing with muscovies in FL.
Apparently those vibrations are painful to the worms.I thought this was crazy until my husband showed me![]()