Nope_49595933949
Well-Known Member
They are, but we like watching them. We have a bad ass rooster than has fought off a ebar multiple times.Oh and chickens are assholes. Screw those stupid shit bags.
They are, but we like watching them. We have a bad ass rooster than has fought off a ebar multiple times.Oh and chickens are assholes. Screw those stupid shit bags.
I'm not going on my rant about them.....I'm sure it can be found with search lolThey are, but we like watching them. We have a bad ass rooster than has fought off a ebar multiple times.
What's the time from chick to rotisserie? I'll never have egg chickens that live for years again but I could handle a few months raising some meat chickens for the dinner table.We have 26 laying hens, 2 roosters, and have 60-100 meat birds raised a year. We eat a good amount of chicken haha
We run the Myers Cornish cross and anywhere from 6-8 weeks we harvest them. Our biggest was about 10 pounds after processing. All they do is eat, shit, and sleep. They are like a completely different animal compared to egg layers. We will harvest some layers this year as well and rotate in some new chicks we raise ourselvesWhat's the time from chick to rotisserie? I'll never have egg chickens that live for years again but I could handle a few months raising some meat chickens for the dinner table.
Yeah, I have a few friends that do meat birds.....totally different. They definitely don't fuck the yard up like laying hens.We run the Myers Cornish cross and anywhere from 6-8 weeks we harvest them. Our biggest was about 10 pounds after processing. All they do is eat, shit, and sleep. They are like a completely different animal compared to egg layers. We will harvest some layers this year as well and rotate in some new chicks we raise ourselves
They fuck it up worse with all their shit. I have to move the chicken tractor 1-2 times a day.Yeah, I have a few friends that do meat birds.....totally different. They definitely don't fuck the yard up like laying hens.
But they don't get out and shit on the kids toys and deck. A chicken tractor is a good idea.They fuck it up worse with all their shit. I have to move the chicken tractor 1-2 times a day.
Fair point. Ours actually aren't that bad, for whatever reason they stay off the playset. Ours actually spend probably half that day in the first 50-70 yards of woods behind the house.But they don't get out and shit on the kids toys and deck. A chicken tractor is a good idea.
We've had a few that where great. More like pets and would follow you around and hang out. But most where just outright stupid or assholes. Maybe if I didn't live in such a snowy area I wouldn't mind the chore but not again here.Fair point. Ours actually aren't that bad, for whatever reason they stay off the playset. Ours actually spend probably half that day in the first 50-70 yards of woods behind the house.
Ours come when you call or whistle for them like dogs. It's hilarious.We've had a few that where great. More like pets and would follow you around and hang out. But most where just outright stupid or assholes. Maybe if I didn't live in such a snowy area I wouldn't mind the chore but not again here.
Check under pots for slugs,they love seedlings.Has anyone ever had any experience of chickens pecking at their cannabis seedlings or plants?
Or any other birds?
I have some leaf damage on my plants
- young seedlings about 12" / 30cm tall
- 1 gallon / 4.5 litre planter bags
- outside in the garden
- ground level on the paving
The damage looks too erratic to be a small insect or worm
- it's not neat curved cut-outs like you see with something that holds onto a leaf and munches their way around\
- some leaf tips are kind of ripped off with a flat edge, and just the central vein remaining
And it looks to be too extensive.
- one night there was far too much damage to have been one critter
- and I do check them every day for pests.
We have a resident chicken ... and most of the damage is suspiciously at a standing peck level.
Also the damage is round the edges of a block of seeding rows ... looking like something browsed the easy to reach plants.
- - -
I have done some reading, but all I can find are stories of seed eating birds pecking at buds. That's not the case here.
Sometimes tricking them by placing a fake egg in their nest will make them lay. Fyi.They’re at least 4-5 months old now and still no damn eggs. I swear they’re broken. I need more land….so I can put them in the corner. Far far away from my garden.
They could also be laying somewhere else. Those silly birds.Sometimes tricking them by placing a fake egg in their nest will make them lay. Fyi.
Still kinda young too. It's also dependent on hours of light they get per day.They could also be laying somewhere else. Those silly birds.
Yea exactly. We have an led bulb on a timer in their coop to extend their days. We were getting 17-23 eggs a day now it's down to 13 or 14 a day.Still kinda young too. It's also dependent on hours of light they get per day.
I had chicken get into my greenhouse once, they stripped the leaves as high they could reach!Has anyone ever had any experience of chickens pecking at their cannabis seedlings or plants?
Or any other birds?
I have some leaf damage on my plants
- young seedlings about 12" / 30cm tall
- 1 gallon / 4.5 litre planter bags
- outside in the garden
- ground level on the paving
The damage looks too erratic to be a small insect or worm
- it's not neat curved cut-outs like you see with something that holds onto a leaf and munches their way around\
- some leaf tips are kind of ripped off with a flat edge, and just the central vein remaining
And it looks to be too extensive.
- one night there was far too much damage to have been one critter
- and I do check them every day for pests.
We have a resident chicken ... and most of the damage is suspiciously at a standing peck level.
Also the damage is round the edges of a block of seeding rows ... looking like something browsed the easy to reach plants.
- - -
I have done some reading, but all I can find are stories of seed eating birds pecking at buds. That's not the case here.
I know people do that....but that's almost like a flushing thread haha......some say it's added stress. I personally didn't do it, but not necessarily because of that. But I also built my coop by the amount of btu's a healthy chicken puts off. I don't remember it offhand, but probably have it written down somewhere lol. I also went with a deep litter idea.....where you have 12"+ of straw/wood shavings and chicken poop basically composting under them. A compost pile puts off heat too. It gets cold here so heat in the winter was the priority.Yea exactly. We have an led bulb on a timer in their coop to extend their days. We were getting 17-23 eggs a day now it's down to 13 or 14 a day.
18 once......I thought the hen was fox food. 18 days later I found her sitting on the eggs in high 90°s temps. The eggs go bad outside in that heat for that long......it was like 18 sulfur fart bombs. Fuckin nasty The cable guy was there and watched the start of itThey could also be laying somewhere else. Those silly birds.
Our chickens were fine in -30 in the coop last year. In our experience ventilation is more important than heat.I know people do that....but that's almost like a flushing thread haha......some say it's added stress. I personally didn't do it, but not necessarily because of that. But I also built my coop by the amount of btu's a healthy chicken puts off. I don't remember it offhand, but probably have it written down somewhere lol. I also went with a deep litter idea.....where you have 12"+ of straw/wood shavings and chicken poop basically composting under them. A compost pile puts off heat too. It gets cold here so heat in the winter was the priority.
I agree it's extremely important.Our chickens were fine in -30 in the coop last year. In our experience ventilation is more important than heat.