One egg hatched today. Yay. I didn't get to see the chick, it was hiding in momma's fluff. Hopefully the other egg will hatch tomorrow.
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I think it would depend on how overboard you went, and on how upset you made your neighbors and the city. I recently bought a chicken tractor with a small coop from a couple who went overboard big time. They had more than 60 chickens on a small urban lot - smaller than mine. They had 4 huge coops and the smaller coop/tractor. The city came down hard on them and they were required to get rid of all of them and are not allowed to have chickens ever again. The city even mandated the coops be removed ASAP. Honestly, DH and I were not surprised that the city had issues considering probably the top 6" - 12" of the land the chickens had resided on was composting poo. It was very, very stinky.
I wouldn't recommend going too overboard with the chicken math on a city lot. The only reason I'm having chicken math issues right now is because I'm trying to build a flock of six girls - and we want to hatch those girls ourselves, which, of course means we're going to end up with some boys to have to give away - and that puts us over our numbers until we can grow them out and figure out who's a boy and who's a girl. The eggs in the incubator are already spoken for if my chicks that I have right now turn out to be girls - so I have a pretty good back-up plan (I hope).
Slinglings is in Seattle. Someone complained my neighbor had roosters. She didn't. The city wrote her a letter telling her they would visit at such and such time. They came to visit. They told her to get rid of her extras (she'd hidden some). They noted that she did not have roosters.
One egg hatched today. Yay. I didn't get to see the chick, it was hiding in momma's fluff. Hopefully the other egg will hatch tomorrow.
Question....
DH just asked me about the logistics of how this was going to work when the newest chicks (up to 12) hatch. If all 12 hatch, the new babies will need the big brooder because that many will not fit in the fish tank brooder. We'll let them dry off in the fish tank brooder, but they'll need to move quickly to the bigger one. Will my 4 older chicks, who will be 8 weeks old at that time, be old enough to go outside full time in the mini coop/chicken tractor? The mini coop has a hardware cloth floor, and will be completely predator proof.
Today my older chicks played outside quite a few hours without being under the light, and seemed fine, so I hope that's a good sign.
I guess the tiny babies could go into a large Rubbermaid tote for a week or two, if we need to grow the the bigger chicks out in the big brooder a little longer.
I don't really know how rare it is, but I do know that it's one of the most misdiagnosed diseases out there. Something like 80-90% of women diagnosed with hypo or hyper thyroid disease, actually have Hashimotos. Most Dr.'s don't know much about this A.I. disease so they tend to go more towards treating it the same as they would treat hypo or hyper thyroids, which is not the correct way to treat this disease at all.
A very strict diet is about the only defense against Hashi's. You have to find out (through lots and lots and lots of testing) what your "triggers" are and avoid them like the plague. My #1 trigger is gluten.
If not treated properly, Hashimotos can lead to many other auto immune diseases.
Question....
DH just asked me about the logistics of how this was going to work when the newest chicks (up to 12) hatch. If all 12 hatch, the new babies will need the big brooder because that many will not fit in the fish tank brooder. We'll let them dry off in the fish tank brooder, but they'll need to move quickly to the bigger one. Will my 4 older chicks, who will be 8 weeks old at that time, be old enough to go outside full time in the mini coop/chicken tractor? The mini coop has a hardware cloth floor, and will be completely predator proof.
Today my older chicks played outside quite a few hours without being under the light, and seemed fine, so I hope that's a good sign.
I guess the tiny babies could go into a large Rubbermaid tote for a week or two, if we need to grow the the bigger chicks out in the big brooder a little longer.
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There would be space to hang a very small heat lamp (do they make those?) inside the mini coop. I wouldn't want to use a high watt bulb. It is shaped like a barn and has a ventilated area that looks like a loft area of a real barn. Until I bumped the 100w infrared lamp yesterday, they were on a 100 watt in the garage and doing fine. Now they're back on the big 250 watt bulb because it is all I have at the moment. Any recommendations for a small ceramic heat lamp that would fit in a mini coop? And, would I be able to get away with a low watt red bulb outside at 8 weeks?
ETA: The mini coop has a pop door that will be closed at night, so they won't be able to escape into the dark tractor run until I let them out.
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May is typically a little warmer than December. Maybe not last year though, huh? How late did we have really cold weather last year?