Monday, December 20, 2010

Chickens Have Been Moved

We recently moved to a different house and of course, took the chickens along.

It was a scene moving the coop, we have video and will try to post it soon!

 For the record, we not did move them as they do in China:



You get some large sacks, poke some holes in the top, weave the birds into each so each head is sticking out, and then you can throw the entire sack on a bicycle or truck. Source.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Girl, You'll Be a Woman Soon...! Arrival of the First Eggs

My little helper Nick and I headed out to shut the chickens in their coop for the night. We opened the door to count them, and I noticed a little egg shaped item on the coop floor. I could barely believe my eyes, but I reached down to touch it, and while the shell was soft, it was indeed an egg! The girls turned 22 weeks old this week, and they are entering womanhood!

Here you can see the various sized combs they are developing, which is a sign of maturation.

Dot's comb seemed to grow overnight.
This photo was taken this weekend, and the comb is even bigger today.


Nick helped me look in the nesting boxes, and there sat another beautiful little egg. Nick was very excited, but I told him we needed to go get Joe, and away we ran back into the house to get Joe.

We grabbed flashlights and headed back outside as quickly as we could. I was so nervous they would step on an egg or that the eggs would be terribly fragile and break, but I was pleasantly surprised to find how well they stood up to the boys handling them. The soft-shelled one even stood up to Nick throwing it on our kitchen floor when we got inside because Joe told him it was "bouncy" and he wanted to see how it bounced. It didn't bounce, but it did stay intact!

We ended up finding three eggs! One truly hard-shelled blue-green beauty, one soft-shelled oddity, and one membrane-covered mutation. I have read that when chickens aren't getting enough calcium, their shells can be soft or non-existent. Doing further reading tonight, I also found out that first eggs can be like that too. Soft-shell, no shell, smaller and sometimes oddly shaped are all normal in the first 2-3 weeks of laying. I have more research to do.

Left to right: Soft shell, no shell, hard shell. This is before I washed them off.

We don't know which of the 9 layed these eggs, and we don't know if it was 3, or 2 or even just 1 of the girls that produced these. There's probably not a good way to know with the configuration we have for their coop. I feel confident, however, that we will be seeing MANY more eggs soon!

Sadly, Jason missed the excitement as he was in class this evening, but as soon as he got home, the boys couldn't give him all the details fast enough.


So begins our sustainable egg supply, from happy, healthy chickens, that we can feel confident are untainted by weird hormone treatments or poor living conditions. I can't wait to fry up one of these eggs. Maybe tomorrow morning, with a side of bacon!

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

New Coop Door

I was having issues with the previous coop door that would be pulled up and down using a cable. Mainly, It would not reliably latch closed (I had fashioned a weighted latch for it) and the boys could not easily work the action open and shut as it was mounted too high.

I abandoned the traditional up and down coop door and opted for the Star Trek sliding-type door (without the dude working it behind the scenes). I had welded a lever/handle with a mount and hooked it up via a linkage to the coop door, which rides back and forth in a slot. There are locking pins that friction-fit into the lever panel to secure the door open and shut (although I am not too concerned that they can be moved unintentionally).





I am VERY satisfied with this solution and I must say that it looks pretty slick. The door secures tightly and boys can work the door easily.

Monday, September 6, 2010

And the Release...

So, here's the deal (for all you raccoons, foxes, and other predators out there that may be reading the blog):

If you are caught in one of my traps overnight, you will receive option 1:

Be delivered to a Missouri state park (see map).


This will be you, incarcerated and then released into the wild, Thunderdome-style, like your buddies below:




But, if I CATCH you in the act, messing with my chickens, I will deal with you using option two.


The choice is yours varmints...

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Captured!

They just look guilty, don't they?

So our gentle flock spent a relaxing day in the coop all day Saturday. Saturday night, Jason re-baited the critter trap with a proven mix of sardines and moon pies. Sunday morning: Surprise! Not one, but TWO rather small raccoons, looking very guilty, were hunkered down in the trap.

A reckoning...

Do they know? I wonder how much their tiny brains really understand?

Joe and Nick were very curious about the raccoons and we decided to tell them the whole story about what had happened Friday night. They were a bit down, but as I explained that at first we thought three chickens had been taken, and then we found two, including Snaggletooth, and Joe was very relieved. They really seemed to take the news well. I do think it helped that the one that was lost hadn't been one we had named. I described her to Joe, however, and he did know which one I was talking about. It was a little difficult, but I don't think he's scarred. I think in some way it's good for us as humans to have a detachment from animals. It doesn't mean we don't treat them well and care for them as best we know how, but these are really farm animals, livestock, and they are around us to provide food and sustenance for our family.

The boys helped us coax the girls from the coop, and Joe promptly picked several up and gave them hugs. He is better than any of us at grabbing them quickly and carefully, and they are so patient with him!

Joe and Shortie

Nick and Snaggletooth

Nick trying to catch another chicken

Joe is so gentle with the girls

So there have been no further incidents. We baited the trap again Sunday night in case there were any other predators stalking around, but Monday morning the trap was clear. We are working off the assumption at this point that we have removed the offending attackers and we will hopefully be okay for a while. Joe and Jason let the raccoons loose about 5 miles away at a state park just north of our home.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Predation of our Flock

The summer of chickens has really gone remarkably well. The pullets are 20 weeks old on Monday, and are likely just 2-3 weeks from laying their first eggs! Jason has completed the nesting boxes, and they are now attached to the side of the coop. The boxes were constructed with a top hatch for adults to get to the eggs, as well as a child-height latched door that the kids will be able to use to collect eggs.

As the excitement of that day approaches, another eventuality is forcing us to think about our coop and fencing and overall security of our flock. Normally Jason posts, but today, I wanted to write my thoughts on the events that started last night.

Sadly, something (as yet unidentified, but we think most likely a cat) attacked our chickie-babies last night, which resulted in two MIA's and one wounded. On Friday night when I went out to lower the coop door and secure the girls for the evening, I very quickly came upon a mass of feathers in the yard. Either the hens were fighting or they were already starting to moult, OR, uh-oh, something had attacked.

Moving quickly to the coop, I counted only 7 hens. Securing the door, and taking a quick look around for any sign of a chicken dinner, I went in to get Jason and flashlights. Together we scouted around for a sign of any of the hens, and we were surprised to find one of the girls tangled in some vines near the fence behind the coop. She was so still, and there was blood dripping from her neck. We first thought she was dead, but as I reached toward her, her eyes moved and we realized she was breathing. I picked her up and didn't notice any other injuries, so we took another quick look around for the other two, then took the injured bird in the house to check her out more closely and clean her up.

Jason went out to continue looking and saw a cat around the side of the house. We never see cats in our yard, so it seemed too coincidental. We have now set a trap out to catch it. Back inside, upon closer inspection, we found the blood on the back of the injured girl's neck. We assumed at first that it was from puncture wounds from a bite, but we wonder now if perhaps she hadn't injured herself when she got caught in the vines, likely when trying to escape the attacking animal. We rinsed her off with fresh water and sprayed some antibacterial and pain reducing spray on her, then applied pressure for about 20 minutes. Thinking she might be far more relaxed in the secured coop with her hen buddies, we took her back outside. Based on some reading we have done that says that sometimes chickens will attack a weak or injured hen in the flock, we made sure that no blood was visible on her feathers. We have read that the redness of the blood can set the other chickens off.

We then spent about another 30 minutes scouring the yard for any sign of the other two. The only other things we found were some blood on the side of the house (we wiped it off so the kids wouldn't see it), and an area near our back gate where there was another mass of loose feathers where it seemed the chicken(s) had been yanked out into the wilderness of outside our fenceline. Jason wire-tied some additional fencing over the gate to close up any holes to help keep other critters out. Oddly, we also found a mass of feathers by the front gate of our house, underneath our kitchen window. We wonder if this is where the attack began, or if there is another explanation.

We were really frustrated about the situation. Not just because we had likely lost two chickens, but because we really are digging on this idea of providing some of our own food for our family that we know comes from healthy, free-range chickens, and dangit now we had lost 20% of our production! Of course, we were very hopeful that while the chase was likely pretty intense, that the actual death was swift. There's really no telling though, and I guess that's just part of the violence of nature. We went to bed hopeful that the other two girls were roosting up high in the trees and we would see them again the next day.

Saturday morning, I went outside to check on the trap and look for more "clues" and amazingly, the hen we call "Snaggletooth" came strutting across the yard. After a basic inspection, she appeared unharmed and in good health. We decided to leave the girls in the coop for the day, just until we could do more research, and maybe get another night's chance to catch a cat in our trap.

Saturday afternoon, I went out to do a hard-target search for the last missing bird, and took the pictures shown here. There was also a good number of feathers under the coop door, which may indicate that was where the attack began, or maybe the hen had made a run for the safety of the coop, only to be caught before getting inside. It may also be that these feathers accumulate in this area simply because all the chickens come and go through this entrance several times a day. Inspection of the area in the yard where the large pile of feathers was revealed nothing new. There was no blood to be found, but the feathers seemed to trail off into a depression in the earth behind a row of shrubs we have. Finally in this area, there were two bunches of feathers with flesh and blood and a small bone attached. I bagged this up so as to hopefully avoid attracting other predators to the scent. Searching all around the rest of the yard, then searching outside the fenceline, I tried to follow the continued trail of feathers, but after another 25 feet, was unable to find any further clues of where the last chicken may have been taken. Surely at this point, we can assume she is dead, but we would still like to find the carcass, again, hopefully to avoid attracting other predators.

Having thought from the beginning that we had lost three chickens, having lost only one, we feel pretty fortunate. When we ordered our ten chicks in April, we hoped that we would end up with at least six layers, so I suppose we are still better off than we had hoped at this stage. We just have to determine the best course of action to protect our remaining flock.

The injured lass seems fine today. The others don't seem to be picking on her and she is otherwise behaving normally. We would do well to monitor the wounds and we'll have to keep an eye on her for signs of infection.

The gal we lost was one of the few we haven't named. She was the first to develop a pretty comb on top of her head, which kind of made her seem like the big sister of the flock. We are saddened she won't be part of our laying flock, but we will learn from the experience and will do our best to protect the rest of our young ladies.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

New Watering Method

Rather than filling glass jars for the chickens which just get nasty and filled with bedding chips, we are trying something a little different.

We picked up a few of these:

And affixed them in the bottom of a bucket. The bucket is filled with water and suspended over the chickens. Using this method, we don't have to fill their water as often, we estimate about once a week or so. The nozzles are made for use with no water-pressure, just gravity and they pass through a surprising amount of water. They just wander up and start drinking; no fuss, no muss, and clean water for all!

I'll let the pictures and videos speak for themselves:



Saturday, May 29, 2010

Coop Nearing Completion...

Here is the coop, with a spanking-new coat of paint in proper farm-red.



The ramp leading into the coop sits in a channel attached to the outer wall, just under the coop door.

It can be easily taken off for when I need to remove it to perform maintenance.


The roosting area has been shown before, but I wanted to point out the screened area under the branches. The screen is raised off a droppings board that can be removed from the outside of the coop to be cleaned. It keeps the predominance of droppings away from the birds (to keep them healthy) and makes the coop easier to maintain.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Chickensaurus(es) Walk Among Us...




This resemblance just a coincidence? I THINK NOT!


Jurassic Park be damned, these things are running around with my children!


Did Dinosaurs Become Chickens?

T. Rex Kinship With Chickens Confirmed

Chickenosaurus: Canadian scientist says he can create dinosaurs from chickens

....note the "O" slipped in the middle, extra vowels in a name always make scientific claims more legitimate. Check out Aluminosilicates. SEVEN vowels and very impressive for the effort.

Finally, if you are tired of waiting for a real chicken'o'saurus to be cooked up in a lab somewhere, you can build your own:
T-Rex To Go book from Amazon. Link.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

The Hens Have Moved to the Permenant Coop




Well, the chickens have finally moved out to the coop. They seem to like it, but that said, they have brains the size of a peanut (shelled) so who's really to know? :)

Coop Almost Complete

Even though the hens have been moved out to the coop, there is still much work to be done. Here is short tour of how it looks so far:


From the outside, still needing paint. The chair will be stored under the overhang and brought out for chicken-inspired reflection...



This shows the eve on the West side of the coop. The flap-windows are held up by a simple chain and hook. The electrical feed is evident and the yellow hook on the left is where the chicken-reflection-chair will hang.



This is just inside the coop on the right. Some cleaning supplies hang there and the winter windows are stored against the wall.


This is just inside the coop on the left, and has shelving for miscellaneous supplies and of course, a thermometer for keeping an eye on the inside temperature. incidentally, it was close to 100 degrees today and the coop never got above 85-90. Ventilation FTW!


The hens digging on their new roost.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

New Brooder Needed, Again!



The hens have fully outgrown the original brooder that was a plastic tub and wooden wall extensions. Their new pad is a 4' x 4' frame wrapped in (oddly enough) chicken wire. They are still in the garage, as the need to be just a little older to be outside to ensure that they can handle the colder evenings.

We have also upgraded their feeder to a longer trough-style model to hold more feed (they are a hungry bunch).

Their water pans are still the type that use canning jars to hold the water, but we have two now. Once out in the coop, I think I am going to upgrade them and build a hanging waterer connected to PVC pipe with four of these little guys ever 8" or so. They should keep the litter dry and provide clean water to the hens since there will be nothing at ground-level to contaminate with wood chips and such.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

The Boys with the Chickens

No pithy comments, just the boys digging on the baby chicks...