- Thread starter
- #281
It's kinda warm here atmI've been away too long.
Now I have pageS to catch up on.
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It's kinda warm here atmI've been away too long.
Now I have pageS to catch up on.
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Huh?I'm doing exactly that. @aart
No....lol it’s from your responses. Once it’s typed it cannot be untyped.Your wrong and if you read the articles and the stories and looked at some posts you would realise this. Instead you're making assumptions with no knowledege or evidence.
I do stand out in the yard and pretend I’m Ace Ventura. They rarely come to me though. I think it’s the yellow pants. How’s that for random?
Don't you believe itNo....lol it’s from your responses. Once it’s typed it cannot be untyped.
It makes me wonder how hens manage to hatch chicks.
Interestingly, chicks used to get hatched in an incubator here.
They then got moved to a wire cage with a heat lamp over it and once they had feathers they got put in with the rest of the flock one night.
They died like flies.
They died from coccidiosis.
They died because they didn’t get properly accepted into the flock and wandered about on their own and a predator got them.
A couple just wandered off, never to be seen again.
I threw the incubator in the bin when I took over looking after the chickens.
There is a reduced egg hatch but those that do hatch so far have lived longer.
Since making some changes to the two nesting boxes (the egging boxes are different) the hens hatch a much higher proportion of the eggs they sit on, 4 out of 4 on the first trial and 5 out of six on the second.
Of course, with an incubator if large enough can hatch many more eggs than a hen can. I restrict the hens to a maximum of eight eggs.