6
629864
Guest
@TropicalBabies
My reds are about 1.5 years old. The rest were all hatched on August 11...so that makes them 22.5 weeks old. The 2 new Orps are 6-7 months old.
I currently dont have anywhere else to house the boys in a bachelor pad. That's why I was thinking I might need to reduce the number of them. We had originally wanted just 2, but got sent 4. I maybe should have culled two when they were little and easy to catch. Now they're impossible to catch. Sure, I can corral them easily, but I haven't ever been able to catch one since they left the brooder. Cant catch the pullets either. But that's also why we chose these two breeds...flighty and therefore more predator resistant. The reds and the Orps are the only chickens I can catch reasonably reliably....and even some of the reds are very difficult to catch. I guess I'd have to wait until nighttime to catch one of the roos and hope the other three dont go on the defensive.
My reds are about 1.5 years old. The rest were all hatched on August 11...so that makes them 22.5 weeks old. The 2 new Orps are 6-7 months old.
I currently dont have anywhere else to house the boys in a bachelor pad. That's why I was thinking I might need to reduce the number of them. We had originally wanted just 2, but got sent 4. I maybe should have culled two when they were little and easy to catch. Now they're impossible to catch. Sure, I can corral them easily, but I haven't ever been able to catch one since they left the brooder. Cant catch the pullets either. But that's also why we chose these two breeds...flighty and therefore more predator resistant. The reds and the Orps are the only chickens I can catch reasonably reliably....and even some of the reds are very difficult to catch. I guess I'd have to wait until nighttime to catch one of the roos and hope the other three dont go on the defensive.