A Beginner's Guide to Raising Chickens
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We have a pretty good flock of hens,geese and ducks that all live in the same barn like house that we built and there is plenty of room for all the animals to live comfortably together. I have 5 hens and they all started laying about a month ago. What I was wanting to find out is about just 1 of my hens. She is the same age as the other hens but she will go missing a day or 2 recently and then she showed back up for about a hour to eat and then she was gone again. Is she maybe brooding somewhere else or what other reasons can there be for her to leave and then come back and then leave again? We thought at first that something might had got her because she was the only missing hen until she came home 1 morning when it was time to be feed and as soon as she ate she left again.
I have a dozen pullets, that are just maturing. One keeps dropping her eggs from the roost. I have nests and have blocked access to under the roost but every day there is one egg under the roost. Does anyone have a solution to this?
Early spring my 3 year old rooster had gotten so mean that if you turned your back, you were getting spurred in the legs. I had enough of it and we had chicken soup. Well, the problem with not having a rooster is, hens don't have the best defense against racoons. Lost 6 birds in one night a week after our chicken dinner. Had I not heard the ruckus I might have lost them all. 3 years and I didn't lose a single bird, one week without a rooster and disaster. Now I have to seal my birds in every night and let them out each morning until my two new roosters can defend the flock...what a pain in the butt.
take wood blocks and make a playground and screw them into each other.
I think your estimate of 700 to get started raising chickens is a little ridiculous and will make people think it is too expensive. I am an old redneck, but using things I had laying around the house I was able to get set up for less than 100 bucks. It ain't the Ritz, but the chickens don't care. Got a 10 x 10 house which was already there but about to fall down, with a 2 foot by 4 foot box on legs I put inside of it for their sleeping place. A 15 x 10 foot outside run as well, with a chicken wire net over the top f it to keep the hawks out. Anybody with just a little bit of skill can build something to get started out of scrap wood you see everywhere (like dumpsters and peoples front yard), a $35 roll of chicken wire, and make some post out of small trees. If you want to keep chickens, you can start as cheaply as you want to. Don't let this article make you thing your gonna have to fork out a grand to keep a few chickens,.
What are things chickens can't eat? I was told tomatoes and onions ?
Correct. Do not feed chickens tomato leaves or green fruits, onion, raw eggs, avocado, rhubarb, butter, apple seeds or stone fruit (pits), chocolate, citrus, raw chicken (we know!), uncooked rice, uncooked potato, caffeine (including coffee grounds), dried beans, eggplant leaves, and more. Bread should be fed in moderation as it contains nearly no nutritional value. Same with pasta.
And when it comes to scratch, remember it’s not a whole meal! Simply a collection of cracked grains, it does not have a complete balance of any of the nutrients a chicken needs to live. It should only be thrown out as an occasional treat for the birds.
2 parts poop to 1 part bedding materials. That is way too much waste to bedding!
2 to 3 parts bedding material to 1 part waste is more ideal. I used to use a small two section yard outside the coop. Plant any kind of grass seed, wheat oats whatever. Keep birds off that half. Until the grass sprouts. Then turn the chickens loose on it. They eagerly eat the tender sprouts! Then you just water in the waste into the grass.
I have a question on my chickens. This time of year it is beautiful out and they are just learning to go into there little house and we leave it open all the time my question is during the winter cold weather when I plan on closing them in do I put there food and water in there with them or how long can they go with out eating and drinking???
Actually, as you approach winter, hens eat 1.5 times the amount they eat in the spring/summer! They need to keep themselves warm and they are also burnt from egg-laying and need to recover. When egg-playing, they need more protein. In winter, they will need more carbohydrates to keep themselves warm. We would feed your chickens layers pellets for nutrition. And give them some cracked corn at night. Only as a snack to warm them up not as a main meal.