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Annika
True Blue Farmgirl

5602 Posts

Annika

USA
5602 Posts

Posted - Mar 02 2010 :  6:31:34 PM  Show Profile
I love Chickens, there is nothing like contentedly clucking hens and a morning call from a handsome rooster
I don't know/can't decide which breeds to raise yet, but I love to talk barnyard fowl!
I'm working on expanding my current coop and making it more predator-proof. I'm also planning to add wild turkeys and pheasants to my little postage stamp farmlette.
Wyandottes, Marans and several of the bantam breeds appeal to me. My land lady has a large mixed breed flock, but I want to keep my breeds pure and raise some heritage chickens and turkeys I think.I need to build a turkey house and a run and shelter for the pheasants...but looking through poultry websites has me all fired up

Any one raise game birds?
Silver or Gold Seabright bantams? (I LOVE the little hens, they are so cute!)
Which breeds do best with cold winters?
My rooster, T-Rex...is a mixed breed and something of a yard pet. He is quite tame and follows me around when I'm out in the yard or garden.
Anyway I'll quit babbling here and look forward to learning all that I can from all of you
And sharing my adventure with into poultry raising.



Annika
Farmgirl & sister #13

Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. ~Leonardo DaVinci

Edited by - Annika on Mar 02 2010 6:38:26 PM

chick-chick
True Blue Farmgirl

322 Posts

Liz
New Britain CT
USA
322 Posts

Posted - Mar 02 2010 :  7:11:24 PM  Show Profile
Annika,
i am new to the chicken world, I didn't know that I liked chickens,but,I love them We had two leghorns last season but the racoons got them I didn't even know we had raccoons in our neighborhood. Now we reenforced our coop and have a australorp and a I don't remenber but sheis light brown. Enjoy them
Liz
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Chives
True Blue Farmgirl

232 Posts

Victoria
Shelton Washington
USA
232 Posts

Posted - Mar 02 2010 :  8:14:05 PM  Show Profile
Annika, I love anything with feathers. I have bantams right now. I want to get some bigger chickens. I also would like to get some royal palm turkeys. They are just beautiful. Vicki
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kristin sherrill
True Blue Farmgirl

11303 Posts

kristin
chickamauga ga
USA
11303 Posts

Posted - Mar 03 2010 :  05:20:20 AM  Show Profile
Hi Annika. I think my 4 original game birds are the Old English. Is that what they're called? They are so cute. And great mothers, too. I have 2 sets of "twins". I would like to get some of the heritage breeds because I think they'd be better able to handle the total free range-no grain feeding that I want to get to. So I think I will start looking around here and see if anyone raises any.

Also have 12 Buff hens. I love them! I will always have this breed. They have laid eggs all winter.

I also have 1 Americana, Hildi. She quit laying back when her best friend Summer was killed. I think she must have been traumatized horribly. But yesterday while on my daily egg hunt I noticed a strange looking egg. It was a pretty green Hildi egg!!!! And a double yolker!! Her eggs are really pretty and big and good. So I am egg-cited to see her eggs again.

Kris

Happiness is simple.
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simplecomfort
True Blue Farmgirl

60 Posts

Tawnya
Rural Orrick Mo
USA
60 Posts

Posted - Mar 05 2010 :  09:34:10 AM  Show Profile  Send simplecomfort an AOL message
hey there. i love the bantams and the beautiful breeds.. i have millie fleurs. they are tiny chickens and such good mothers.. also polish and frizzles are neat to have. they are little family birds.. they will stay in a littel group with their family. i just got baby chicks and have silkies, regular bantams, and an orpington.. i am getting a few polish, wellsummers and lakenvelders this weekend. they are beautiful as well as the faverolles.. i love watching them free range.. i also have one turkey that is very tame and 2 tame peacocks.. here is a good site that has a chart of all the chickens..
http://www.ithaca.edu/staff/jhenderson/chooks/chooks.html

"Thank God I'm a country girl"
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Annika
True Blue Farmgirl

5602 Posts

Annika

USA
5602 Posts

Posted - Mar 05 2010 :  09:56:28 AM  Show Profile
Tawnya, I absolutely LOVE Millie Fleurs, they are so pretty, I love the seabrights to, both gold and silver. I'm going to have a mixed flock apparently LOL!
And I love to watch them free range as well, they always look so healthy and happy.

Annika
Farmgirl & sister #13
http://palouseprairiegirls.blogspot.com/
Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. ~Leonardo DaVinci
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southerncrossgirl
True Blue Farmgirl

631 Posts

Gena
Harmony NC
USA
631 Posts

Posted - Mar 05 2010 :  2:20:29 PM  Show Profile
I have 6 Buff hens and 1 Buff rooster. I have had Barred Rocks and RIR. So far I have liked the Buffs best. I am incubating some Buff eggs now. I hope I will have some little peeps in a few weeks.

"A Dream Is A Wish Your Heart Makes"==Cinderella
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Ms.Lilly
True Blue Farmgirl

826 Posts

Lillian
Scotts Mills OR
USA
826 Posts

Posted - Mar 06 2010 :  07:06:58 AM  Show Profile
Hi Annika- I have a wide variety of chickens and do have a few favorites. We started off with Buff Orpingtons and Delawares. My buffs are sweet, quiet and often broody. The Delawares on the other hand have a bit more "moxy" and never go broody. Both are dual purpose and brown egg layers.

Last summer my DH suprised me by ordering an exotics collection from McMurray. I recieved many polish types with the "poofy" feathers on the head. Those are fine if you live somewhere there isn't alot of rain, my poor girls always have feathers in theirs eyes and run into everything. In the bunch also came 3 cochins, 3 campines, 1 Wyandotte, 1 Acracauna, 2 Motteled Houdans, 2 phoenix (1 is a beautiful but useless rooster) and 1 Silver Spangled Hamburg (rooster). I have absolutly fallen in love with the cochins! They are very docile and I have already had 1 go broody. I really think I would have enjoyed the Hamburg if it wasn't a roo. The campines are a small bird and everywhere all of the time, they take no attitude from the bigger ones!

Our roo is a Delaware and he is the best! We have 2 buffs that came with this last summers order and they will now become stew because they are mean. Hamburg roo-mean, Phoenix roo- he is beautiful and knows it. He is also very smart, in fact too smart for his own good.

Well that should give you something to think about.

Lillian

Oh yes I forgot to mention I have fallen love with my aracauna and wyandotte too.
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kristin sherrill
True Blue Farmgirl

11303 Posts

kristin
chickamauga ga
USA
11303 Posts

Posted - Mar 06 2010 :  07:54:04 AM  Show Profile
Tawnya, where are you ordering your Welsummers from? I would like some more of those. I love them. And the eggs are beautiful.

Kris

Happiness is simple.
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dawnm
True Blue Farmgirl

92 Posts

Dawn
Blueridge Mts Va
USA
92 Posts

Posted - Mar 06 2010 :  6:34:07 PM  Show Profile
Hello,

I have been thinking about having a very small chicken coop for two or three bantam hens.

A woman, who I have lunch with some times, thinks that chickens are awful and I will be really sorry if I get them. She grew up taking care of chickens. So she speaks from personal experience.

She and I are very different. My DH and I have three dogs and a cockatiel. She doesn't even have goldfish. We have an old house built in the 1820's and 1 acre of property. She lives in an apartment. In a nutshell. we are very different

I have friends who raise chickens. I can get them a good home if I think I have made a mistake.

It will be an outlaw chicken coop as the zoning doesn't allow for "livestock" in my neighborhood. My DH can build it so other than the materials, it will not cost anything.

So this is my story and I am sticking to it. LOL Dawn

Small farm farmers rock!
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Daisy7896
Farmgirl in Training

16 Posts

Sarah
Douglas MA
USA
16 Posts

Posted - Mar 07 2010 :  11:01:14 AM  Show Profile
Hello,
I have been raising chickens for years but never have tried incubating any eggs. I have a few different kinds of chickens right now and a few roosters. I want to get a incubator and try to incubate some of my eggs but I don't know how to choose the eggs to incubate? Is it just as simple as collecting eggs and putting them in the incubator? Information please?????


I love my goats
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KellyWall
True Blue Farmgirl

336 Posts

Kelly
Apison Tn
USA
336 Posts

Posted - Mar 07 2010 :  2:10:11 PM  Show Profile
I have 6 barred rock hens and one rooster, his name is Rocky. the hens do not like Rocky, they shoo him away any time he gets near. I want my hens to sit and hatch eggs that is why I got him, so how do I know if the eggs are getting fertilized if I haven't seen any "action" ? Do the hens automatically start sitting on the eggs?

Kelly #238

May your bobbin always be full...
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magnoliakathy
True Blue Farmgirl

453 Posts

Kathryn
Magnolia Texas
USA
453 Posts

Posted - Mar 08 2010 :  05:54:13 AM  Show Profile
I have a small flock (1 tom and 2 hens) or Royal Palm turkeys, once I got them up fully-feathered they are doing very well. Mine have not gone broody and I have the incubator heating up to put eggs in tonight. I am hoping one of the hens gets broody and I can slip the poults under her at night and she will think she did it. I have no Bantams at present, but I do really like the Mille Fleurs and Silver-laced cochins. We keep and assorted flock for eggs, in my experience all hens will go broody when they are "ready", there is no way to tell when this will happen. I have read of forcing a hen to go broody but have not tried it. Checking an egg for fertilization, crack the egg into a bowl and look for the sperm cell to be attached to the yolk, it looks sort of like a white string, and it is not unusual to see two strings on a yolk if you have more than one rooster.

When you free your mind your heart can fly. Farmgirl # 714,
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countrymommy85
True Blue Farmgirl

898 Posts

Krystle
MT
USA
898 Posts

Posted - May 05 2012 :  07:03:43 AM  Show Profile
I had a question about a hen. We have just one chicken left, a Golden Laced Wyandotte and she was laying an egg a day then all of a sudden went broody. Since we have no rooster the eggs won't hatch. I have looked high and low for someone with farm eggs that has a rooster but as soon as they get wind of what I'm doing they want to charge me $1 or more an egg instead of $1 a dozen. What gives? I tried finding a rooster but when people find out you have a hen or hens they want to charge you $15 for a rooster. Each rooster we have ever had turned out to be aggressive to our kids and had to be dispatched. Why would I risk paying $15 for a bird that might end up being dispatched? I can buy them at the store frozen and dressed out for cheaper!
Okay, here is my question. Since these eggs won't hatch will she eventually just give up? Will she go broody again later on when we can get a rooster? Thanks!

Mothers are those wonderful people who can get up in the morning before the smell of coffee. ~Author Unknown

http://countryrenaissance.blogspot.com
http://www.etsy.com/shop/SunflowersAndHoney
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batznthebelfry
True Blue Farmgirl

1257 Posts

Michele
Athol Ma
USA
1257 Posts

Posted - May 05 2012 :  08:45:05 AM  Show Profile
Krystle....to answer your question Yes your hen will go broody again with or without a Roo....As for her broodiness now you need to just keep taking the eggs away & try to get her out of the nesting box...they will eventually quit being broody but sometimes since no eggs are hatching they will sit there longer losing more weigh & getting weaker...I had one who refused to get out of the box & after 32 days was down to skin & bones...thank goodness I put wetted feed in front of her daily or I think she would have maybe died on me....I finally figured out to close the coop area where she would go to sit on eggs & forced her to be out...we have a dog house so she would sometimes go in there but would finally quit & go back to being a normal non-broody hen...lol

Annika since you are in Idaho you might want to look for breeds that have small combs if you are worried about too cold of winters...there are many pure breeds that would work for you & still give you eggs....I have a few with the pea combs that are wonderful ole girls, hearty & good layers...Michele'

Chickens RULE!
hen #2622
theoldbatzfarm.blogspot.com
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MiaBella
True Blue Farmgirl

100 Posts

Michelle
New Caney TX
USA
100 Posts

Posted - May 05 2012 :  3:32:49 PM  Show Profile
I have Barred Rocks & Araucanas (blue egg layers). Love fresh eggs for breakfast! We used to have a Rooster until he decided to peck me on the back of my calf (still have a small scar). He was re-homed...not going to peck me and still get fed! In all fairness, I DID warn him but he must not have understood English....



Michelle
Farmgirl Sister #4097

MiaBella Farm
New Caney, TX
www.miabellafarm.com
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Dusky Beauty
True Blue Farmgirl

1108 Posts

Jen
Tonopah AZ
USA
1108 Posts

Posted - May 05 2012 :  3:57:53 PM  Show Profile
Kelly, You can tell if any of your eggs are being fertilized when you crack them open. I always use them regardless (doesn't alter the flavor)and it certainly never stopped my great grandparents.
But when I start to see a lot of fertile eggs in my breakfast making, I get to thinking about hatching.
A fertile egg looks like this:
no little whitish halo in the yolks, the roo isn't getting his job done.

I mainly keep just ducks for eggs, but the kids talked me into a couple pullet chicks from the feed store, so we have 2 Silver Laced Wyandottes and 1 Rhode Island Red. They are sweet and lovely little things. They are about 6 weeks old. Nowhere near full grown but they look like adorable mini hens at this age.

The family is pretty burned out on duck meat, so I really want to get into some heritage marans (all the colors I can lay my hands on!)The "chocolate" eggs are gorgeous, and I hear the roosters have very nice breasts and great flavor-- fast growing for a heritage. I think I can do pretty well selling all my extra pullets as layers and freezering all but the best rooster or two.


~*~ http://silverstarfamilyfarm.blogspot.com/ ~*~

“When I stand before God at the end of my life, I would hope that I would not have a single bit of talent left, and could say, 'I used everything you gave me.”
~Erma Bombeck
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countrymommy85
True Blue Farmgirl

898 Posts

Krystle
MT
USA
898 Posts

Posted - May 07 2012 :  1:27:50 PM  Show Profile
I finally got some fertilized eggs from a rooster and chickens of unknown breed and switched out my broody hen's un-fertilized eggs with these eggs. Wonder if she will still sit on eggs that aren't hers and also if it will even work... Will update as updates happen, can't wait to see what happens!

Mothers are those wonderful people who can get up in the morning before the smell of coffee. ~Author Unknown

http://countryrenaissance.blogspot.com
http://www.etsy.com/shop/SunflowersAndHoney
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batznthebelfry
True Blue Farmgirl

1257 Posts

Michele
Athol Ma
USA
1257 Posts

Posted - May 07 2012 :  4:45:30 PM  Show Profile
Krystle your hen will lay on these eggs even if they aren't the ones that were in there before......They are not picky when they get broody...they will even sit on duck or turkey eggs if you put them under hr while broody...lol.......just make sure you give her a bit more protein & calcium while she sits...I stick a small dish of wet feed with yogurt or mealy worms each morning to make sure they are are getting enough...sometimes they will waste away while sitting so this way I am sure they aren't losing too much weight...Michele'

Chickens RULE!
hen #2622
theoldbatzfarm.blogspot.com
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Dusky Beauty
True Blue Farmgirl

1108 Posts

Jen
Tonopah AZ
USA
1108 Posts

Posted - May 07 2012 :  5:43:56 PM  Show Profile
True nuff, I've lost 2 young duck hens to brooding... they just kind of withered up and kicked off.

~*~ http://silverstarfamilyfarm.blogspot.com/ ~*~

“When I stand before God at the end of my life, I would hope that I would not have a single bit of talent left, and could say, 'I used everything you gave me.”
~Erma Bombeck
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countrymommy85
True Blue Farmgirl

898 Posts

Krystle
MT
USA
898 Posts

Posted - May 08 2012 :  07:07:37 AM  Show Profile
Thanks for the tips I will be sure to continue giving her some munchies while she sits. I never knew that they would waste away while sitting and I don't want that to happen to my little hen!!!

Mothers are those wonderful people who can get up in the morning before the smell of coffee. ~Author Unknown

http://countryrenaissance.blogspot.com
http://www.etsy.com/shop/SunflowersAndHoney
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countrymommy85
True Blue Farmgirl

898 Posts

Krystle
MT
USA
898 Posts

Posted - May 08 2012 :  07:09:07 AM  Show Profile
Oh, I just thought of another question I had regarding ducks. We have two hens, a Pekin and a Mallard mixed with something else. They both started laying eggs this spring and the started sitting on their eggs. After a week they got off their little nests and that was the end of that. What would cause them to do this? The mallard hatched some eggs out before so I was really confused with her behavior this time.

Mothers are those wonderful people who can get up in the morning before the smell of coffee. ~Author Unknown

http://countryrenaissance.blogspot.com
http://www.etsy.com/shop/SunflowersAndHoney
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batznthebelfry
True Blue Farmgirl

1257 Posts

Michele
Athol Ma
USA
1257 Posts

Posted - May 08 2012 :  08:45:39 AM  Show Profile
Krystle since you say 'they' it tells me it must have been a stress factor....sometimes even with chickens their broodiness just shuts off for some reason...but if more than one all of a sudden get up & leave there may have been something that scared them or stressed them enough to break the broodiness or whatever its called with ducks....just an idea since it will happen with chickens, that it might happen with ducks as well....Michele'

Chickens RULE!
hen #2622
theoldbatzfarm.blogspot.com
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Dusky Beauty
True Blue Farmgirl

1108 Posts

Jen
Tonopah AZ
USA
1108 Posts

Posted - May 10 2012 :  10:23:54 AM  Show Profile
I agree with Michele. If the ducks have successfully brooded before, something must have changed-- a predator threat, a coop-mate harrassing them, or even too hot. Most of the time, animal instincts know best!

I had two swedish duck hens sitting on a nest together in April, but by the time they started pipping, it was too hot and too dry here in Phoenix, and most of the clutch dried out and died. I was only able to save one of the ducklings out of about 16 eggs and I had to assist her a lot.
But, it was worth it!!



And here is Tapper!!





She's getting so big now! Here she is with her pet banty chicks! LOL



~*~ http://silverstarfamilyfarm.blogspot.com/ ~*~

“When I stand before God at the end of my life, I would hope that I would not have a single bit of talent left, and could say, 'I used everything you gave me.”
~Erma Bombeck

Edited by - Dusky Beauty on May 10 2012 10:27:13 AM
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countrymommy85
True Blue Farmgirl

898 Posts

Krystle
MT
USA
898 Posts

Posted - May 30 2012 :  07:27:06 AM  Show Profile
We have a chick!!!! One of the fertilized eggs I put under the broody chicken hatched yesterday! I posted on my blog about it. I am so excited! She is still attentive to the other egg so I'm hoping it too, will hatch. How much longer should I let her sit on it if it doesn't hatch since the one hatched yesterday?

Also, the ducks are both sitting on the eggs. I found out yesterday that something killed our mallard hen but left the eggs alone. I brought them (the eggs) inside the house and most of them are good. We are going through a cold spell now so I'm glad I found out that soon about the mallard. I'm hoping I can incubate the good eggs. I didn't have much luck last time incubating duck eggs because we used a styrofoam $50 incubator and I had a hard time with keeping the proper humidity. Any tips on that?

The Pekin duck has a nest directly next to my garden under an old cultivator that we use at the beginning of the season. We parked it at the front of the garden and didn't have time to move it back in the shed... Now it is going to stay there until the duck is done! haha, now I have some new yard decorations :) Anyway I will keep posting on the duck eggs now and that lone chicken egg. I gently picked it up and it's heavy like there is a chick in it but I haven't heard peeping yet like I did with the other egg before it hatched... Anyway I will keep updating!

Mothers are those wonderful people who can get up in the morning before the smell of coffee. ~Author Unknown

http://countryrenaissance.blogspot.com
http://www.etsy.com/shop/SunflowersAndHoney
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hoosiercountry
True Blue Farmgirl

572 Posts

karla
north port fl
USA
572 Posts

Posted - Jun 03 2012 :  2:37:25 PM  Show Profile
I need some advise, I have one hen that has started sitting, how long do I let her sit if the eggs are no good? I did have a rooster, but traded him off when he turned mean, for a younger one so I'm not sure if her eggs will be good. Next my other hen gets in the nest with her and lays her egg every day, so should I move the hen sitting and her nest to a private area? Will she do ok with that? And last the nest sits up off ground so if she does hatch any chicks how long do I wait till I put them on ground so they won't fall and get hurt? Thanks
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