Does this guy look like a MGB to you? I was told he might be a HRIR but I don't think he is, the legs are too long.
His buddies are Bantam Cochins.


His buddies are Bantam Cochins.
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Here is a link that might help you outI feel the need to know what to do when the time comes to cull a hen. I signed up for a class through the seattle farm co-op, they will be processing 6 birds with 10 'students' watching/participating. Will I regret this???? The thought of watching this really makes me sad/gives me the creeps, etc. but I don't feel like I'm being a responsible chicken owner by not knowing what to do when the time comes. I don't want to eat any of my birds, honestly, I'm just sort of concerned about having an injured/ill bird and I don't want to see them suffer..I guess I could always bribe a local chicken person to come over and do the deed
Anyway, am I going to regret watching 6 chickens be killed and processed? I have pet cats and I don't feel like I need to know how to kill them, ya know? But they can be taken to an emergency vet and they aren't at risk of being attacked by a raccoon (they're indoor cats). Can chickens be taken to an emergency vet to be euthanized? It would probably cost a fortune. There should be an at home euthanasia kit for pet chicken owners. Chloroform, then an injection of some kind. Something easy and not bloody.
I agree with Farmin Momma's statement. You have prolly less that 2 weeks. SorryThe debate is on. Does Blackie go to auction today? Last night, after Blackie spent an entire day free-ranging by himself because I couldn't catch him I was 100% positive he was going this morning. I spent the day terrified he was going to become food for some hawk while I was gone. Thankfully, he was good at hiding and hung out under a Rhododendron watching Latte in the tractor. This morning, after hugging him and holding him, I'm not so sure I want to let him go.Sigh. Last night the kids were pretty upset about him going, too when we talked to them about it last night. DH says if I want to keep him until we have to let him go, he'll get the fishing net out of the attic today to help me catch the little buggger (didn't know we had one). He's 14 weeks tomorrow. He still peeps most of the time and has a deeper voice some of the time (usually when I finally catch him). How long can I keep him before he crows and gets me in trouble? Or should I just get the inevitable over with and take him?![]()
Reminder to self: 759
The coyotes are prolly from the developed area about a mile away(new sub-division), but if I get a clear shot they will be bagged. And with BCL's RTHawk, it might be a resident. I have a mating pair of RTH about a 1/4 mile away, I can see the nest from the road. The Coopers and Sharp-shinned have moved south. It is warm enough here for the RT's to stay year round.So: yeah, finally got the yard hose frozen yesterday and then, TADA: an unused standpipe in the waterline to my house started leaking when the ground thawed. It was under a pallet and a bunch of insulation as well as 10" of dirt, but the (editorial comment withheld) rabbits thought that was just the best comfy bunker ever. I get to go dig that up as soon as my hair is dry; I decided that I wasn't going to itch for two days this time, if we have to glue in new pipe.
Wanted to say something about Travis's new coyotes: probably the problem is that wherever their primary denning/hunting area previously was has been developed; people up on the ridge between Hillsboro and Newberg have complained to me about how there was an incursion of coyotes after the pie cherry orchards in Hillsboro got turned into condos, for instance. Another thing might be that a new fenced stormwater control area might have provided a new denning area. And then you have your stupid human tricks: the HUGE, fecund female who got hit on the road here in June of 2011 was one of four pups in a stormwater overflow pond who the idiot suburbanites had been feeding Iams the summer they were weaned. She had two litters of six pups before she was killed.
The first bad coyote problem we ever had was when a bunch of stream culvert was laid out by a Texas development company which was sure the State of Washington was kidding about salmon protection; when they couldn't get their permits and appealed and appealed they just left the pipes laying in the blackberries for three summers, and then it took a court order and a bunch of more wasted money to get them to haul it out: stupid waste of money all around, it wasn't even an intermittant stream, it was a permanent one with two runs (springs and chums). In any case, almost a mile of hardened den sites and hidden coyote trails.
I'm really surprised that BCL's coop-invader was a Redtail, although this is a heck of a year for migratory birds.
Suppose I'd better go get eight or ten other things going, eh?
Does this guy look like a MGB to you? I was told he might be a HRIR but I don't think he is, the legs are too long.
![]()
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His buddies are Bantam Cochins.
I feel the need to know what to do when the time comes to cull a hen. I signed up for a class through the seattle farm co-op, they will be processing 6 birds with 10 'students' watching/participating. Will I regret this???? The thought of watching this really makes me sad/gives me the creeps, etc. but I don't feel like I'm being a responsible chicken owner by not knowing what to do when the time comes. I don't want to eat any of my birds, honestly, I'm just sort of concerned about having an injured/ill bird and I don't want to see them suffer..I guess I could always bribe a local chicken person to come over and do the deed
Anyway, am I going to regret watching 6 chickens be killed and processed? I have pet cats and I don't feel like I need to know how to kill them, ya know? But they can be taken to an emergency vet and they aren't at risk of being attacked by a raccoon (they're indoor cats). Can chickens be taken to an emergency vet to be euthanized? It would probably cost a fortune. There should be an at home euthanasia kit for pet chicken owners. Chloroform, then an injection of some kind. Something easy and not bloody.
The coyotes are prolly from the developed area about a mile away(new sub-division), but if I get a clear shot they will be bagged. And with BCL's RTHawk, it might be a resident. I have a mating pair of RTH about a 1/4 mile away, I can see the nest from the road. The Coopers and Sharp-shinned have moved south. It is warm enough here for the RT's to stay year round.