Sunday, February 25, 2018

The Latest Chick Flix

I don't normally record my little peeps.  I don't have the best luck with it and it takes up so much space.  Today, I attempted, it worked, and here are the shorts of it.
Watch as a fight is about to erupt. 



After the fracas - a little poop happens. 


Now is it time to eat!




Friday, February 23, 2018

Late February Chicken Update

With the really cold weather temps in December that continued into early January, the older Welsummers stopped laying again.  In February, I decided to give them one more month to get back on track.  After the Christmas temps/storm, we begin to notice more and more pest issues. Then we started noticing that we were going through more feed. Soon, we noticed that their water was getting fouled quickly because the varmints eating the chicken feed were climbing the waterer to get into the feeder.  

I wondered if the pests were contributing to the older hens' laying issues.  Two of the new hens were also not laying well.  So, we now take the feed out of the pens each night when the hens roost, and bring it out early in the morning when the hens are up (about 6 am). We do know that the hens will chase any small mice that get into their pens, when they are awake. Took almost a month, but the older Welsummers are back to laying eggs. We are getting about 1 per day from the three of them. So that's better. They were almost stew pot poultry, because I had decided I would only wait until the first weekend of March for them to start laying again.  Another upside to the removing food at night is that we are not going through as much feed now. "Imagine that?" LOL 

Older hens will be either sold, or slaughtered in about three to four months, anyway. We need to make room for the new chicks.  We got three Rhode Island Red pullet chicks last weekend. We also picked up six Cornish Cross this weekend. 

Weather-wise, it is super cold again after starting February with some spectacular warm temps. It was in the 60s F the first weekend of Feb. What a cre-azy weather month. Last week the temps started dropping in to 30s during the day and 20s at nights. Then we received, all told, about a foot of snow this past week. However, the most snow on the ground on any given day was about 6 inches.  Finally melting and almost all gone. I didn't have any batteries for my camera and didn't get any pix of the snow when it was happening. This is all that is left now. But we may get more this weekend. 

last of this week's snow
That was a lot of Snow for February!

New chicks are all snuggled together in a small pen to keep them safe and warm until the temps in the garage are warmer. The Rhode Island Reds are about 10 days while the Cornish Cross are about four days. We will put them into a larger pen when we no longer need to control the pen (brooder) temps. 

Baby Chicks and Warmer
First Photo of the Day

New brooder warmer; long story. Short version is that we could not find the power connector for the brooder warming plate and to order one takes more than a week to receive. But, I could get a new warmer shipped overnight delivery. So, yah, different warmer and it is keeping the babies nice and warm. Still waiting for the power cord. [Ugh] For now, it is the one warmer to be shared by all. Thankfully, the Cornish X are about the same size as the 10-day-old Rhode Island Reds. 

Cornish Cross Snuggled under the warmer
Snuggled under the Warming Plate
The rest of the photos from last night. 
Cornish meeting the RIR
Cornish Cross meet Rhode Island Red

Cornish X peeking out from warmer
Peeking out from the Warmth

Poop is always happening.
Poop is Always Happening





Monday, December 25, 2017

Christmas Eve White Christmas

Last year, we had a sudden snow storm on the 15th of December that caught us off guard and ended up with snow inside of the chicken pens.  This year, we had the shields in place before the snow started flying.  We did not get as much snow this year and some of it was freezing rain so it was quite the mix between the two.  Yesterday was so blustery that the wind chill dropped to 16F even though the temps were closer to 30F. We even had a few gusts of 40mph. So, yah, it was bitter cold on Christmas Eve.  

Thankfully, Christmas day has been calm, although it never really got much above freezing. The new chickens are stressed by the snow, but the older chickens seem to be taking it in stride. 

We have a gopher this year that has been taunting the chickens, tunneling under their coops and into their pens. The coops have floors, so it's not like the gopher is adding tunnels into their coops, but my guess is that, either the gopher or mice using the tunnels are getting an added food resource this year.  We do not seem be going through feed quicker, so I don't think they are able to get into the hanging feeders, but I know that the chickens do drop food on the ground, giving the field critters access to the spillage. 

Some of the hens are still laying, so we got a few eggs this weekend. Not as many, but some eggs is better than none eggs. 

Facing East
Facing West - Coops, Cars & Hills
Light dusting of Freezing Rain and Snow
New Hens at the Feeder
New Hens Confused by the Snow
New Hens Perplexed in a Row
Egg in the Nesting Box on Dec 24
Dec 25 More Freezing Rain
Freezing Rain on Coop 1 (older hens)
Freezing Rain (and Snow) on Coop 2
Nesting Box lid Warmed by Hens
Egg in Nesting Box on Dec 25
Gopher Hole from the Field
Gopher Hole and Trail to Hole under Coop 2
Close up of Gopher Hole under Coop 2
Gopher Hole on Other side of Coop 2

It is supposed to warm up tomorrow - we will see if that happens.

Sunday, December 17, 2017

Back to the Full Production

Thankfully, the older hens are back to regular production. But, that was almost a 12-week moult.

Even with the light on every morning this week, the younger hens are not producing. [Big Sigh]  But the older hens are giving us the eggs we need, just nothing to spare.  We just used up the last of our frozen eggs, so we will need to start working on those again so that we have some in storage for the future. Finally have a full dozen in the cooler. [Yay!]

Farm Fresh Eggs for dinner tonight!

Sunday, December 10, 2017

Brr Cold Wind Chill Frost

The East Winds had kicked in hard, however, the older Welsummers have mostly completed their moult and with a light in their coop that kicks on at 4:00 a.m., they are starting to lay again. We have gotten two in the past few days.  

The younger hens are not very egg oriented yet, and we are only getting 1, some times 2 eggs per day from them. I know that a factor is the cold cold temps.  We have put the water warmer out to keep the waterers from freezing overnight and to keep the water a bit warmer during the days. We have not, yet, started closing up the coops at night, but if it drops down into the 20s at night, we will. The younger girls had kicked their light out of the socket, so that might also be a factor.  Got the light back in, moved the coops to a new location and now they have some fresh grass to munch on.


Friday, November 17, 2017

More Meat in the Fridge

The six Cornish Cross chickens have been processed.  We had two roos and four pullets (two male and four female). Collectively, we ended up with 45 pounds of chicken after processing. So that's pretty good.  We spent about $90 on feed, but factor in that they also pastured. No antibiotics, no chemicals, no hormones. We have our winter chicken meat "resting" in a refrigerator for a few days, then they will be frozen for use over the winter months. We still have a 10 pounder left over from last spring. The plan is to roast him this weekend. In some ways, it is a lot of work, but for the assurance of what we are going to eat, it feels about right. 

Sunday, October 15, 2017

The HoopPen attached to the HoopCoop Update

The sun is out, albeit, brisk. Temps are not getting above mid-60s this weekend. However, the chicks are enjoying the fresh air, and the sun through the door.  On occasion, one or two will pop out into the grass to look for bugs and worms, but mostly like being inside where there's heat radiating from overhead. While we have placed food and water in the pen, we will also keep it inside the hoop coop unless they start getting so fat, that they can't walk.  We don't want them THAT fat!

The heavy water-proof canvas tarps along with the down-filled comforter laying in between, is doing the trick to keep the warmth inside at night. That's our solution for now, until we can come up with something better for next year. 

Next weekend will be the extra lighting set up in the other coops, since we are barely getting 13 hours of sun per day. To keep the layers producing a little better, we need at least 13 hours of sun/light. We set up the lights inside the coops to come on at 4 am for the layers and that way, all fall, winter and spring, they are getting a minimum of 13 hours of light and sun to help with egg production. Additionally, we will take off the sun cloth from the pens, so that any sun that does peek out from the clouds, helps to promote a little extra warmth, and lots of vitamin D. 

We always try to use clear plastic on the pens as rain guards covering over 75% of the pens, but at the same time, there's a gap for ventilation purposes on each side.  We do cover one or both sides of the pens, when there's a strong wind or snow for a little extra protection.

I recognize that some people think we go a bit overboard with protecting our chickens, but the reality, as we have learned, is that the extra protection reduces the stress level for the chickens, and we don't need to feed them any medicated food in order for them to be good egg and meat producers. The layers produce good eggs almost all year long, they don't pick/peck on each other, they forage like "real chickens" are intended to do, and they are not bored because we move their paddocks regularly to fresh grass. We don't pamper them; we do treat them humanely without turning them into pets.


Close up of Hoop Pen
Close up of Hoop Pen

Hoop Pen and Hoop Coop
Hoop Coop and Pen is Set up

Cornish Cross Sunbathing in doorway
Cornish X Sunbathing

Landscape of coop and pen from distance.
The goofy Hoop Coop and Hoop Pen

Welsummer leaning into the Sunshine
New Welsummer Doing the Sunshine Lean