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Dogo's are hunters.. and they look like a pitt on growth hormones to some so the scare more on looks then anything else.
They are Argentinian Mastiff's so Large size and power tend to scare the bejebis out of people
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Well that is true. My experience as a vet tech showed me some very nice pitbulls....Chows however, often turned on their owners.
 
CR.
FYI for all ordering feed from Patriot. He has had to raise his prices a bit to cover the increased cost of the grains. To me I just see it as a sign of the times.

As time goes on I don't expect it to get any better.

Don't know about the rest of you but I gave my people a one month notice that I'm raising my price from $3.00 to $4.00 now.
That give them a month to find someone else if they wanted.
Explained to them the cost of feed is going up and I can't take the hit.
They go to the store like us.
They see it happening with food prices.

You all can do what you want of course but I think one needs to raise their price instead of getting less.
When you think about what your chickens are providing compared to store bought eggs then $4.00 is a STEAL!

BTW. .................
Someone mentioned pallet coop.
Hopefully the person that was building them will speak up.
They did really good job and it was on their BYC page.
Great pictures that should give you enough idea's.​
 
Quote:
As time goes on I don't expect it to get any better.

Don't know about the rest of you but I gave my people a one month notice that I'm raising my price from $3.00 to $4.00 now.
That give them a month to find someone else if they wanted.
Explained to them the cost of feed is going up and I can't take the hit.
They go to the store like us.
They see it happening with food prices.

You all can do what you want of course but I think one needs to raise their price instead of getting less.
When you think about what your chickens are providing compared to store bought eggs then $4.00 is a STEAL!

BTW. .................
Someone mentioned pallet coop.
Hopefully the person that was building them will speak up.
They did really good job and it was on their BYC page.
Great pictures that should give you enough idea's.

I'm the one who mentioned the pallets today... I have yet to do more than move them so far... Found out that I have four 4'x8' pallets, but they are super flimsy. They will work for framing the walls, but I'm going to need to do alot of over building to make it completely sturdy... I get some crazy winds here at the head of the bay... And if I dont reinforce it all, it would just fall apart. lol And thank you for telling me someone has a page for a pallet coop! I will have to do a search.
 
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I think that I will confirm at 6 bags of layer in Pacific, and no straw. The straw was not what I had been hoping for. The bales are standard size. I was hoping for compressed bales that are about half the size of a regular bale. I think I now have enough straw for years. I may just try the straw bale type raised bed this year.

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Those ARE 1/2 bales JB really they are! the full size bales are about 1/3 longer a bit wider and twice as heavy!
I used to sling enough of em as a kid on a farm to know
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Ok 6 bags of layer down for you
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So this had me Googling the size of bales, and I think that the best explanation is found with this one.

" Manufacturers use the term "Square" bales to differentiate between those and round bales, even though the bales are rectangular. The small and medium size balers have a fixed bale chamber that produces a bale that is either 14"x18" or 16"x18". The length can be varied to produce bales between 36" and 41". This is the range of length that is required by most automatic bale wagons that are used to pick-up the bales in the field and stack them. Occasionally you will find a bale that is 46" long, but most bales that you would purchase at the feed store are 41" long. If you are buying hay and paying by the bale, you will usually see the smaller 14"x18" bale but will see the larger 16"x18" bales when buying by the ton.
Given the mentioned range, most bales produced for hand loading are 16"x18"x41"


So given that for the most part that I have always bought hay at feed stores, and only once gleaned bales from a local grass cutting setting. The small bales are all that I am familiar with. I do know that the half bales that I get from Del's are a lot softer and more absorbent than the straw that I got from Scott. There is nothing wrong with Scott's straw, but given the size of my yard and coop, I have way more than I can use in a reasonable time frame.

When I got the bales from Scott I could not lift a bale, I just checked again and I can now lift a bale which is good to know. So they bale has continued to dry out nicely. I can manage to lift 50 lbs. if I have to, but I am fairly sure that when I picked up the bales they were on the very high side of 50 lbs. At this point I would say that they are much closer to 30 lbs. I know that the difference is enough to make thing very difficult for me, or really easy.

I also learned from my little bit of research that straw bale houses are made using large bales of straw. That is kind of useless information for building houses in the Northwest.
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Cheryl, I have a Pallet Coop page here: https://www.backyardchickens.com/web/viewblog.php?id=22465-our-pallet-coop-duplex

I
would totally try and do a raised coop and put the 4'x8' down the long way and one on top for the roof. You will get more square footage (32 vs 16!!!) doing it this way then standing them upright. Just park a wheelbarrow at the man door and rake out the bedding. Works great, and then your birds have some cover underneath as well.
 
Does anyone here have Blue Laced Red Wyandotte's? If so, do you have a pen with just black and blue BLRW's? I have a small flock, but all of mine are splash. I'm looking to get eggs or chicks from someone who has a pen of only blue and black BLRW's. Or a pen of only blues or only blacks. No splashes! Please let me know if you have a set up like this or know of anyone who does. Thanks so much!
 
Quote:
gig.gif
Those ARE 1/2 bales JB really they are! the full size bales are about 1/3 longer a bit wider and twice as heavy!
I used to sling enough of em as a kid on a farm to know
big_smile.png


Ok 6 bags of layer down for you
smile.png


So this had me Googling the size of bales, and I think that the best explanation is found with this one.

" Manufacturers use the term "Square" bales to differentiate between those and round bales, even though the bales are rectangular. The small and medium size balers have a fixed bale chamber that produces a bale that is either 14"x18" or 16"x18". The length can be varied to produce bales between 36" and 41". This is the range of length that is required by most automatic bale wagons that are used to pick-up the bales in the field and stack them. Occasionally you will find a bale that is 46" long, but most bales that you would purchase at the feed store are 41" long. If you are buying hay and paying by the bale, you will usually see the smaller 14"x18" bale but will see the larger 16"x18" bales when buying by the ton.
Given the mentioned range, most bales produced for hand loading are 16"x18"x41"


So given that for the most part that I have always bought hay at feed stores, and only once gleaned bales from a local grass cutting setting. The small bales are all that I am familiar with. I do know that the half bales that I get from Del's are a lot softer and more absorbent than the straw that I got from Scott. There is nothing wrong with Scott's straw, but given the size of my yard and coop, I have way more than I can use in a reasonable time frame.

When I got the bales from Scott I could not lift a bale, I just checked again and I can now lift a bale which is good to know. So they bale has continued to dry out nicely. I can manage to lift 50 lbs. if I have to, but I am fairly sure that when I picked up the bales they were on the very high side of 50 lbs. At this point I would say that they are much closer to 30 lbs. I know that the difference is enough to make thing very difficult for me, or really easy.

I also learned from my little bit of research that straw bale houses are made using large bales of straw. That is kind of useless information for building houses in the Northwest.
lau.gif


Wow.. never thought that these little bales were normal feed store sized... On the farm we would get it by the ton in bales so that is where my size ref came from. The straw bales we used to get were 100lbs and the hay was 120lbs plus.

My yard is large for a city lot (85' x 145') so if you come up this way I can buy those extra bales from you. I use it as mud stop as well as winter coop bedding then it all goes to the garden to be tilled in.
 
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I have a pair of BLRW that I'm selling... I "think" 1 is male the other is a obvious hen. I will try and get a photo this coming week.
 
Here's some gratuitous pix of the with hazels blooming. And yesterday I pruned my raspberries, they are starting to leaf out.

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Russ
 
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