Raising baby chickens in your backyard
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Hi I've got chicken layers they are 30 weeks old but they are not laying eggs. Please advice me about when they are going to lay eggs .
Thanks
Hens typically start laying at about six months old, but their laying may be curtailed by the winter season. They are influenced by the hours of light in a day, so the short winter days may discourage them from laying. Yours may start laying in the spring, when the days start to lengthen again.
If you're not already, feed them laying crumbles every morning. My hens will not lay if I don't feed them the crumbles. And if I stop feeding them crumbled, they always stop laying.
___123___Raising Chickens 101: Raising Baby Chicks | The Old Farmer's 蜜桃恋人___123___
I have a hen that is sitting and she has hatched a chick, should I take the babies out and feed and water them or should I let her take care of them.
Either is an option, although in either case, you’ll need to provide appropriate food, water, etc. If you decide to care for the chick yourself, let the hen take care of it until it is dry and fluffy (don’t handle newly born chicks when wet). You’ll need to give the chick food specific for this stage, have water available at all times using a waterer designed for chicks so that they do not drown, and provide warmth at the appropriate temperature, such as with a heat lamp. Keep the chick sheltered and away from drafts. In addition to the advice in the above article on chick care, you might check various Cooperative Extension publications, such as the following, and/or ask your local poultry equipment/feed supplier.
Hope this helps!
I'm an old time farmer, I have 134 laying hens. Just had 19 hens sit on 12 eggs each, RIR, NH, BLK & RED SEX LINKS. every egg hatched. I used to use the red heat lamp that are popular and cause fires and bird loss to often, you can use a cardboard box, plastic tub or a metal trof for goats water, (My Favorite) it is narrow 2 feet wide and 8 feet long. we place heating pads under half our brooders (if they get to warm they can move to cooler ground, Lined with paper towel. we have only used them on low or medium heat. the radiant heat coming up from the floor will make your chicks VERY COMFORTABLE, especially when shipped in. as long as you have shown them the water, They are good to grow! the radiant heat coming up from the floor makes them so happy, heat will range between 79 to 83 degrees. YES, the temps are correct. with a soft light overhead no direct light on them. on at 6:am and off at 11:pm with total darkness for 7 hours. We started using the heating pad method years ago, In my new book "Back to Basics Raising the Perfect Poultry" coming out in July. instructions on the basics of raising the best organic laying hens, egg selling, chick hatching & raising. Natural remedies & cures along with intensive knowledge on treating injuries. I hope this has helped a few people make life easier when raising very happy chicks that really don't chirp much because they are so comfortable! They will also love you if you feed them live meal worms from Day one of life. We also raise organic meal worms for all our birds on the farm. Good Luck.
Monday night one had a pip now today, Wednesday cracked pinky size, Tuesday night another had pip it just hatched a few minutes ago. Do I help the one from Monday?
I just bought 18 baby chicks different kinds of egg layers, but my grandson wanted 2 bantam chicks. when I put the bantam chicks in with the other chicks they all started picking on the two bantam chicks leg. Their legs are black is the only reason I can come up with ,I now have put the bantam in another tote. Can you raise bantam chicks with the other one? and if not will they pick on them when they are older. If you can't raise them together I need to take them back to the store.
Today I got two chicks, one of them was short and a bit overweight. When we got to my house it had trouble walking for some reason, and it kept sliding around. We saw a piece of food on it's foot so we cleaned it off, but it still has trouble walking. We put the both of them in a bin and put them on the stove (it wasn't on) and turned the heat thing on (not the stove, the thing above it). It's gotten much quieter but we don't know if it was just because the Chick was cold or if it's really injured. I think it's sick or something because it's legs are kind of flimsy, and we can't go to a vet. Any ideas on how to fix it?