Chickens, now she's done it! (cute chick content)

Chickens, now she's done it! (cute chick content)

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Fermit and Sexy Sarah

Original Poster:

12,903 posts

100 months

Sunday 26th May 2019
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In addition to our three dogs and two cats, it appears that we're now custodians of a mother hen and her eleven one day old chicks!

The allotment neighbour asked S to 'look after' a broody Chicken of his, with 11 eggs ready to hatch. A quick chat with him confirmed, she could keep them if she liked. That's it, I thought, they're going absolutely nowhere when they hatch!

Yesterday I spent a 10 hour day, ensuring the run is 100% fox/cat/rat proof. She would be beyond heart broken if anything happened to them.

I undertook the following measures -
Thick steel mesh under it, with thinner mesh over that, to stop a rat dig, followed by a fox extending the hole.
Thick fox proof mesh on all the panes.
Padlocks on all doors and flaps, basically any potential entry point.

When we extend the run - attaching to essentially a repaired small shed, we'll do likewise with that. The perimeter, already 3 sided will be taken to about 10 foot tall with mesh (foxes can scramble 6) which goes out on itself at the top, making it impossible to scramble over.

We are also taking over the dogs regularly, as foxes tend to avoid the scent of them.

We'll probably have some cockerels up for adoption soon (ideal to only have one in the run) if anyone wants to adopt a free alarm clock?!
This is Sarah talking through what's going where. The shed which she was in to hatch is what we're going to attach the new run too, when the shed is made more secure/ fox proof.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1U66zIPebRwEjY4Mxt...

11 chicks hatched yesterday, all including mum doing well.

This is the only chick photo I can upload for the minute, as the others taken on the SLR today are far too large, even when downsized mad



I'll get S to take some more phone snaps, and upload in due course.

Fermit and Sexy Sarah

Original Poster:

12,903 posts

100 months

Sunday 26th May 2019
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More photos to follow within a few hours, when she's back from the allotment. Taken loads more!

Fermit and Sexy Sarah

Original Poster:

12,903 posts

100 months

Sunday 26th May 2019
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2gins

2,839 posts

162 months

Sunday 26th May 2019
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Well I guess that's one way to get your neighbour to rethink his porch. Are any of them cocks?

Fermit and Sexy Sarah

Original Poster:

12,903 posts

100 months

Sunday 26th May 2019
quotequote all
2gins said:
Are any of them cocks?
Yet to be established, and yet to be established how we sex them, or how to find them new homes if there are too many boys!

These are not garden chickens, the video link above was taken in our newly acquired second allotment, diagonally behind our established one. About 100 metres/1 minute from home.

Fermit and Sexy Sarah

Original Poster:

12,903 posts

100 months

Sunday 26th May 2019
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We've already gained the trust of mummy hen, she's letting us handle her two day old babies already. The theory being that if they are nurtured by humans they will be more receptive/accepting/friendly to them when grown up.

anonymous-user

54 months

Sunday 26th May 2019
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You will have great difficulty getting rid of the cocks - may be best to start preparing yourself to have to dispatch them.

Fermit and Sexy Sarah

Original Poster:

12,903 posts

100 months

Sunday 26th May 2019
quotequote all
desolate said:
You will have great difficulty getting rid of the cocks - may be best to start preparing yourself to have to dispatch them.
We have got wind of this. There is no way Sarah would allow their necks to be wrung - and neither me. She'd prefer to go as far as setting up independent confinements than that option. We'll figure it, but none of them will meet their maker.

anonymous-user

54 months

Sunday 26th May 2019
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Fermit and Sexy Sarah said:
We have got wind of this. There is no way Sarah would allow their necks to be wrung - and neither me. She'd prefer to go as far as setting up independent confinements than that option. We'll figure it, but none of them will meet their maker.
Fair enough.
Some cocks turn out OK, but others are complete tts and horrible to be around.

Fermit and Sexy Sarah

Original Poster:

12,903 posts

100 months

Sunday 26th May 2019
quotequote all
desolate said:
Fermit and Sexy Sarah said:
We have got wind of this. There is no way Sarah would allow their necks to be wrung - and neither me. She'd prefer to go as far as setting up independent confinements than that option. We'll figure it, but none of them will meet their maker.
Fair enough.
Some cocks turn out OK, but others are complete tts and horrible to be around.
Yes, we've seen. The allotment neighbour has two cocks, one of them (no kidding) is the size of a microwave, and is a nasty barsteward. S's mum has hens, could take one, and we know a local lady who takes in all sorts of rescues, who would happily take them, and we'd slip her a few hundred £ for her efforts. Sarah couldn't put a fly out its misery, god forbid a cockerel. I can't fault her TBH.

Dave.

7,356 posts

253 months

Sunday 26th May 2019
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desolate said:
Fair enough.
Some cocks turn out OK, but others are complete tts and horrible to be around.
Bit like this place then? hehe

Mr Pointy

11,206 posts

159 months

Monday 27th May 2019
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Fermit and Sexy Sarah said:
desolate said:
You will have great difficulty getting rid of the cocks - may be best to start preparing yourself to have to dispatch them.
We have got wind of this. There is no way Sarah would allow their necks to be wrung - and neither me. She'd prefer to go as far as setting up independent confinements than that option. We'll figure it, but none of them will meet their maker.
Unless you really enjoy pissing money away after a few £40 vets bills you may well think differently.

Fermit and Sexy Sarah

Original Poster:

12,903 posts

100 months

Monday 27th May 2019
quotequote all
Mr Pointy said:
Unless you really enjoy pissing money away after a few £40 vets bills you may well think differently.
She absolutely won't allow harm to any of them. If we have some we'll figure a plan from there.

tweenster

84 posts

62 months

Monday 27th May 2019
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Keeping chickens is thoroughly rewarding, we have had them for about 8 years now. We currently have 5, all hens, but did reach 45 at one point when we had cockerals. A word of warning - there will be sadness ahead! If you decide to keep a cockeral your flock will increase very quickly (unless you are very diligent in removing the eggs) and no-one wants a cockeral so you will need to learn to despatch them. Our hens free-range around the garden (we have a third of an acre in rural Lincolnshire) so fox attacks are a daily hazard, the worst event was when we lost 20+ in one night. The current hens sleep in the trees so are safe from foxes, and are only vulnerable if they decide to sit on eggs on the ground (we have 3 coops that they ignore!). The dog has learned to leave them alone (no small ask of a lurcher) and he does wee sound the garden which well help deter foxes. We love having them around and they do have their own personalities although they can be incredibly stupid, such as diving in for a worm when you are digging; I haven't decapitated one with a spade but it has been close!

Fermit and Sexy Sarah

Original Poster:

12,903 posts

100 months

Monday 27th May 2019
quotequote all
As a kid aged 9-16 maybe? I had 8 hens, no cocks, so I've got the know of the basics. Being rural foxes are a real threat, and we've given careful consideration how to prevent an attack. We're well aware that they don't stop when they get in, S's Mum once lost all theirs in a garden run when Mr Fox got in.

We're also well aware that no one wants Cocks, so without killing any are there ways we can dispatch them? (if there are any)

Also, is collecting eggs daily enough to stop their numbers multiplying? We're also aware that cocks (I wish there was another word I could use, I feel like I'm writing a porno!) can often not get on, so there is a possible way to keep any apart.

In the mean time, another pic....


CAPP0

19,573 posts

203 months

Monday 27th May 2019
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Fermit and Sexy Sarah said:
so without killing any are there ways we can dispatch them?
In this context, dispatch = end life of.

Fermit and Sexy Sarah

Original Poster:

12,903 posts

100 months

Monday 27th May 2019
quotequote all
CAPP0 said:
Fermit and Sexy Sarah said:
so without killing any are there ways we can dispatch them?
In this context, dispatch = end life of.
I did wonder, it ain't going to happen. My wife will never allow it.

Cantaloupe

1,056 posts

60 months

Monday 27th May 2019
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I take it mankind has not found an easy way of chicken sexing ?

I believe it's a well paid job, takes years of training to discern a cock chick from a hen chick, the secret is
the feel of the external genitalia between thumb and forefinger

[ hey, stop sniggering at the back , you're making up your own jokes now ]

Mr Pointy

11,206 posts

159 months

Monday 27th May 2019
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Fermit and Sexy Sarah said:
CAPP0 said:
Fermit and Sexy Sarah said:
so without killing any are there ways we can dispatch them?
In this context, dispatch = end life of.
I did wonder, it ain't going to happen. My wife will never allow it.
What is your impetus for keeping chickens? They aren't pets; if they were in your garden then yes it's nice to watch them bimble around but yours aren't, they are 100m away so you won't see them. Hence it must be for eggs. Now how much are you prepared to pay for eggs? It's virtually impossible to produce eggs at an economic price if you just keep a few. You'd be much better off buying eggs from someone else who keeps chickens & you'll save a fortune.

Keeping chickens involves getting aquainted with death. No-one wants your spare cockerels no matter have much you fantasise about them going off to some sylvanian hen farm. The ratio of hens to cocks needed for a flock dictates that the cockerels need culling, it's just a fact of farm life. Have you got someone lined up to look after them when you go away? They need feeding, cleaning & letting out in the morning & shutting in at night. & it's not a two minute job like feeding a cat.

Once you get a year in & you work out that you've shelled out £5 for an egg produced by a hen you rarely see it's quite possible that enthusiasm will wane.

Fermit and Sexy Sarah

Original Poster:

12,903 posts

100 months

Monday 27th May 2019
quotequote all
Mr Pointy said:
What is your impetus for keeping chickens? They aren't pets; if they were in your garden then yes it's nice to watch them bimble around but yours aren't, they are 100m away so you won't see them. Hence it must be for eggs. Now how much are you prepared to pay for eggs? It's virtually impossible to produce eggs at an economic price if you just keep a few. You'd be much better off buying eggs from someone else who keeps chickens & you'll save a fortune.

Keeping chickens involves getting aquainted with death. No-one wants your spare cockerels no matter have much you fantasise about them going off to some sylvanian hen farm. The ratio of hens to cocks needed for a flock dictates that the cockerels need culling, it's just a fact of farm life. Have you got someone lined up to look after them when you go away? They need feeding, cleaning & letting out in the morning & shutting in at night. & it's not a two minute job like feeding a cat.

Once you get a year in & you work out that you've shelled out £5 for an egg produced by a hen you rarely see it's quite possible that enthusiasm will wane.
They will be treated as pets, of sorts, by S. Her allotments are pretty much her favourite place to be, she spends most of her weekends there, and every evening. I'm aware that pretty much no one will want the (if there are any) cockerels. S will never entertain killing any of them, it's not an option. If we have some cockerels then the options are A) separate them from the hens, as cocks who have grown up together can live together. B) she also wants some ducks, home the cocks with them C) let them all mingle, egg collect daily, where possible don't allow cocks to sit on eggs.

Honestly, having had them before - and my Dad was quite strict that they were not to be palmed off on them when I became bored of them - I am aware of their care regime.

RE holiday cover. S has an allotment friend and neighbour, who also has ducks and hens. She's there daily, they help each other out with all other allotment activities, so I am certain that baby-sitting each others birds when away will be part and parcel of this.
As an EG, they were gifted a (then) unused greenhouse by us, they've now gifted us one back and will build for us. The chicks coops came from them, and the food growing on both their allotments are made up of a lot of swapsies. Before our chicks came along they also gifted us weekly eggs. S is about to gift her a hand made Evelyn's allotment sign, as she loved her 'Sarah's allotment' sign that I gave her a while back. They are all 'help out' together.