We Quit Cigarettes

By the way, Kiki, I know a gal that smoked her whole life and quit using Chantix. She's in her late 50's or early 60's and it was more than a year ago. She said she wasn't bothered by people smoking around her and the only thing that got her was watching people smoke on TV :idunno I thought that was odd. But a complete success story nonetheless!
 
See if you can catch a few fresh poops tomorrow.
See what they look like.

Have you noticed anyone acting a little sluggish or hunched over?
Well, he was (Foggy--only the roosters have names that I can remember :oops: ) Everyone else seems happy enough, running around, eager to get their food, under foot, etc. Foggy has always been kind of passive. I put him in with the hens but he was getting picked on too much, so I put him back in with the mixed flock (roos, turkeys, waterfowl) where he'd been before. Then the turkey hens started in on him and also a couple other roos. So I put the poor misfits in the fenced yard in a tractor. The turks can get in there but there's no food--just the snow--so they usually don't.

One did fly in a few days before I decided foolishly that it was a nice day and hence, time to process these extra roos. She was picking at him and he was just standing there trying to hide his little head. :mad::mad::mad: I got her out and put them all in the tractor. Since then I haven't let them out.

On reading about coccidiosis it looks like it's an opportunistic disease. With all the trauma he's had, he would certainly qualify to be attacked by a nasty, sneaking opportunistic parasite. :barnie Poor little guy. He was too kind and gentle for this world.
 
By the way, Kiki, I know a gal that smoked her whole life and quit using Chantix. She's in her late 50's or early 60's and it was more than a year ago. She said she wasn't bothered by people smoking around her and the only thing that got her was watching people smoke on TV :idunno I thought that was odd. But a complete success story nonetheless!
:thumbsup
 
Well, he was (Foggy--only the roosters have names that I can remember :oops: ) Everyone else seems happy enough, running around, eager to get their food, under foot, etc. Foggy has always been kind of passive. I put him in with the hens but he was getting picked on too much, so I put him back in with the mixed flock (roos, turkeys, waterfowl) where he'd been before. Then the turkey hens started in on him and also a couple other roos. So I put the poor misfits in the fenced yard in a tractor. The turks can get in there but there's no food--just the snow--so they usually don't.

One did fly in a few days before I decided foolishly that it was a nice day and hence, time to process these extra roos. She was picking at him and he was just standing there trying to hide his little head. :mad::mad::mad: I got her out and put them all in the tractor. Since then I haven't let them out.

On reading about coccidiosis it looks like it's an opportunistic disease. With all the trauma he's had, he would certainly qualify to be attacked by a nasty, sneaking opportunistic parasite. :barnie Poor little guy. He was too kind and gentle for this world.
:(
 
Off topic question:
Ok, so I have heard quite a few stories about rooster(or other male fowl) sacrificing their own lives when danger comes knocking at the coop door. But I‘ve never had a personal experience with this.(not saying I don’t believe it) Has anyone else?
 
Off topic question:
Ok, so I have heard quite a few stories about rooster(or other male fowl) sacrificing their own lives when danger comes knocking at the coop door. But I‘ve never had a personal experience with this.(not saying I don’t believe it) Has anyone else?
I haven't. My roosters wheel off alarm calls then dive for the woods. Personally, I'm glad. They can't beat up huskies anyway.. may as well save their own skin.
 

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