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- #231
They usually go after chicks and small birds, but every now and then they try for a big one.Me too.![]()
Boy I read a lot about hawks, but not hardly anything about falcons. Have you had problems with them before?
-Kathy
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They usually go after chicks and small birds, but every now and then they try for a big one.Me too.![]()
Boy I read a lot about hawks, but not hardly anything about falcons. Have you had problems with them before?
I don't want to sound cold, insensitive or uncaring, but it doesn't bother me too much if they get the chicken chicks, but the peachicks have to be in a hawk/falcon proof enclosure.That must be frustrating having to deal with predators like that.
I don't want to sound cold, insensitive or uncaring, but it doesn't bother me too much if they get the chicken chicks, but the peachicks have to be in a hawk/falcon proof enclosure.
-Kathy
I used to feel the same way, but doing them has taught me how to spot malpostions, shrink-wrapping and other problems, which is so useful when peafowl only lay a limited number of eggs from May through October.I can do a necropsy on a chicken body. I never really know what I am looking for....... but I will be following this educational thread.
I just CAN'T do an eggtopsy though. Somehow looking a peeps that died during development gags me.
I've accidentally gone to cook with an incubated egg, sort of bothers me, lol.We were having eggs tonight and I had 2 of my little bantam eggs and I was holding the yolks to see if I thought they were fertile (my d'uccle just started laying a few weeks ago) and I am just curious. I think they may have been, but my husband said if I didn't quit he wasn't going to want to eat. lol! He won't eat my eggs, only store eggs. We rarely have eggs anyhow.