Hi and welcome to Lyn
I've got 2 welsumer chicks that are 4 weeks old and I agree with LittleGecko, they are beautiful birds and of course they lay gorgeous terracotta coloured eggs. Unfortunately, my chicks are at the ugly fluff to feathers transition phase and despite doing our best to select pullet chicks, it appears I've got one of each which will unfortunately be related, so I might be looking for a swap at some point in the future.
Sadly there is no sign of Dippy still and to make things worse, Horace has also disappeared, but unfortunately from the feather trail, that appears to be a fox, so most likely that was Dippy's fate too. Margo and Matilda, who were kept with Horace are very unsettled, I think mostly from losing him, as they will almost certainly have witnessed it, but also because I am not letting them free range at the moment, until I get a bigger stronger enclosure made for them. I hope he gave the fox as hard a time as he used to give me! And at least he sacrificed his life for his ladies, so I can forgive him for some of the unpleasant confrontations that we had and it appears his defensiveness served it's purpose after all..
Yes broodies are strange. Tasha is continuing to stash eggs in her nest in the loft. I dread to think how many she has now, but it will be in excess of 11. She is still slyly adding to it each day and roosting as normal with the others, but I'm pretty sure she will set in the next couple of days. I admire her natural instinct to be sneaky. In the wild, that would help keep her brood safe, so I see it as a positive attribute even if it does cause me a little extra effort.
Frances has 7 days to go, so we will be expecting chicks about the same time. It will be good to compare notes and excitement as things happen! Have you candled your eggs? I tried it with Tasha's first brood, but gave up because we couldn't see anything. Then we candled a freshly laid egg and realised that what we couldn't see was in fact what we wanted to see.... ie all the eggs were solid dark and developing whereas the newly laid egg was translucent. Since all 14 eggs hatched from that first batch I've got no real concerns about fertility, so I'm not bothering to candle this time. What will be will be!
Anyway, I've got to head back out and start figuring out how/where I am going to build my secure enclosure for Margo and Matilda and perhaps put them with the rest of the flock up at the yard until I get it built. Maybe I will bring all the young cockerels down home into the enclosure I build and leave the egg production ladies all up at the yard, where they may be a little safer.
Best wishes to everyone
Barbara