I don't have brakes.
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You know there's another platform, that shall not be named but starts with a T and ends with a blr, that you would be able to cause all sorts of trouble on

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I don't have brakes.
![]()

You know there's another platform, that shall not be named but starts with a T and ends with a blr, that you would be able to cause all sorts of trouble on![]()
It still looks like a pullet.You are so sweet, thank you! They all came from the pullet bin, but from day 1, this one was first to pick her head up and investigate me, and clearly bonded to this one other chick. Once they were all home, I kept noticing her being first ahead of all the rest to check things out while the others hung back, perched on the feeder while the others ate, and then when I read about cockerels being more outgoing etc. that made me think, oh man, you might not be "head hen" afterall!
So I know there are some cockerels of this breed that might be farther along already at 6 weeks, and some birds of other breeds that turn out to be pullets! Because the females just develop differently. It doesn't seem like there's a hard and fast set of rules, which makes it so much trickier - more like a cluster of early signs that start to point in a certain direction.![]()
Thanks for looking! I appreciate it. I'm probably the only one who ever makes those posts actually hoping for a rooIt still looks like a pullet.
Men and meat just go together. Bacon, pork, steak, it will never be turned down.I texted Mr Isadora this morning to tell him about the pig and that was the first thing he wrote back:
"Let's have a pig roast!"
Men and meat just go together.
Bacon, pork, steak, it will never be turned down.