Posts Tagged ‘brooders’

Hatching Chicks and more chicks

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

The chicks started hatching yesterday, and oh what an event it has been!  They were a suprise in many ways as we did not know what exactly they might look like!  They are just adorable of course, mostly buff looking with little wild stripes here and there.  Today we watched 2 of them race to see who would be first out of their shells!  The incubator is full of vigorous chicks and I couldn’t be happier about it.  On the downside, I candled again all the eggs in the other incubator, and all but 2 of my GLO Family 1 were infertile.  Such a disappointment really as I understand that to be my best chance really.  But.. 2 is better than none, and it’s too late for me to pair them up again, well.. not too late, but I’m too lazy!  Seriously, he’s already been moved in with new girls and those girls have a new man!  I’ll just see what happens here and perhaps it can be enough somehow to move forward to the next step anyway.  As i understand it the first generation after the cross are basically identical within one family.. so it matters not that I have a quantity of them.  But.. is it too much to ask for 1 boy and 1 girl?  Oh please???  That would at least be some sort of savior to the project in a small small way!  I do have the BlueX cockerel still, and just barely I might add!  I made the mistake of leaving him in a new pen with his siblings who haven’t seen him in a couple of weeks, only while I cleaned his run out.  Well.. needless to say, he’s now in a hospital crate with healing wounds.  They managed to pluck most of one of his wings!!!!  It’s awful.. and I feel so bad for walking away when I did.  Never again, live and learn.  He managed to hide his head pretty well and most of his body.. but one side took the brunt of the picking.  He’ll get better, poor sweetie pie that he is…  we’ll make sure of it.

Today, I’m rearranging, cleaning out and getting ready to move in the next clutch of chicks to the outside brooders.  I’ll keep them in the house a couple of days until they are surely sturdy and fluffy and eating, then outside on the back porch they go.  I’ve got to split the hen house in half and move all the white orps that are staying out there, move Bob into the isolette in the buff pen so he can get used to seeing his new ladies (he’s moving next weekend with them) and then move the bigger hen house birds into Bob’s old place as they are now up For Sale and I don’t expect them to stay long.  Then there is one last little GLW hen I picked up from Don Chandler a couple of weeks ago.. she got injured during transport so she’s been staying alone recovering.  She just started laying and I am moving her to a more shady spot on new ground.  She’s hopping around pretty well and I hope she’ll make a full recovery, but her fate here is yet undetermined.

That and a little gardening is what is in store for today!  I have an early and LONG day tomorrow away from home, so I gotta get what I can done tod

Incubation X 4

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

I didn’t get to blog the last couple of months as much as I would like.  I’ve been working so hard on a variety of projects that I just haven’t found the time to sit down here and type out some of my thoughts.  Too, many of my thoughts have been scattered here and there and mostly I was afraid I would ramble too much!

To summarize where I am right now.  There are 3 clutches of eggs in the incubators, and a broody hen is sitting on 4 eggs, all of which are due in the next 2 weeks.  A lovely lady from Southern Indiana wanted some of these White Orpingtons from McMurray hatchery, but she was unable to convince her husband that driving 6 hours to pick up some pretty rare chicks was a good idea.  SO, another lovely woman on the Tennessee Hobby Farm Yahoo group that I belong to, happens to make half that drive all the time, from Knoxville all the way almost to Nashville.  Now, Indiana lady is able to drive down to the area around Nashville and so it looks like we’ll be able to get her the chicks she wanted with a transport!  I’ll take the chicks to their first ride in Knoxville, then they’ll go on a trip to nearly Nashville and THAT is where their new mom & family will pick them up.  How great is that! Where there is chicken will, there is a way!

The gardens are growing, some slower than others; Corn is growing well, strawberry season yeilded several quarts of fresh succulent berries, tomatoes and cucumbers are nearly ready to start picking, onions and winter squash are growing nicely, none of my bell peppers are doing as well as I would like, and so will be planting many more of those in the second round.  I’ve started more watermelon, cantelope, cauliflower and planted several Black Bean seeds yesterday.  Green beans are flowering nicely, but my spinach is not growing much at all.  The sweet potatoes that we planted are starting to take off, and our potatoe plants are out of control!    I still haven’t gotten much of the garden page update, but will put that next on my list!

Well.. it’s a busy time for me as my high school daughter transitions from one grade to the next, I’ll have to take a break from hobby farming soon to teach her to drive.  Of course we’ve been teaching her for years, but the serious stuff starts soon!

I’ve had a setback in my GLO project, which means that most of the eggs from one family do NOT look as though they are developing into wonderful little chicks.  I’m not sure what I’ll do, either scrap it or try again, but for now it’s just a setback.

Ok.. I have to get moving and get many other things done.  I’ll write again soon!  I’ll have lots of fuzzies to be bragging about soon, first clutch due this weekend!!!  Early Sunday morning I expect the pipping & zipping.

Rain, Rain, Rain & MORE RAIN!!!

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

Yes, that is correct, it’s been raining here for days!  I can’t wait for the sun to come back out and grace us with it’s presence.  My seeds are mostly sprouted now, and are enjoying very little daytime sun due to the weather, but they are still growing.  We’ve prepared another bed for growing food, right along side of one of our coops.  This is where I plan to plant onions and the like.  Since it’s a new bed, it won’t be ready for anything that isn’t tough for a year or more.  I hope onions will grow there.  It’s only 3 rows maybe 5-7 feet long.  I know it sounds small, but so is everything here on our micro-farm!    We are planning on trying to construct a cold frame of sorts on our property, to extend our growing season in both directions.  If I’m correct we should be able to grow a few things straight through the winter months, assuming we don’t get hit with blizzards and such.  I’m not sure what yet I could grow, but I suspect I can grow some tomatoes, parsnips, cabbages & lettuces, maybe even a cucumber plant or two.  This could be enough to keep us in salad & the chickens with cabbage for the winter months, which would be GREAT. Today I put the 2 eggs in the incubator in hatching position, again I’m using a carton to hatch these.  We expect them to hatch on Monday or more probably Tuesday.  It’s ok that there isn’t more, we cracked the other 3 eggs and it looks as though we have 1 quitter and 2 clear eggs, the quitter was in the first couple of days because there is essentially nothing there.

Today I need to get lots of computer work done, and so had my daughter go out to care for all the poultry.  The chicks in the turkey brooder outside are doing well.  They have a plastic storage tote filled with woodchips which they sleep & “dust”bathe in.  It’s the same as we are using for nest boxes, with a hole cut out of one end for entry/exit.  We have the lid off of this one and a 85 watt red floodlight shining down into it, which keeps it nice & warm.  The rest of the brooder is wire floor and they are getting used to that little by little.  This way they are out of the living room, in a brooder big enough for them (this is the turkey brooder) and they have both warm & outside temperature places to get to, it’s their choice.  Since they’ve had to huddle together in the evenings, they’ve been getting along much better since moving out to the porch last week.  Which is of course helpful, as the weather and their future coops are NOT ready for them to yet be living out in the yard.  I’ll hold the two hatchlings in the 3rd bedroom tub brooder until their new friends arrive by mail, and then I’ll move everyone out to Snoozer, our regular chick brooder.  By the time they are too big for snoozer, the chicks in the turkey brooder will have moved out, and so they can move in there.  At around that same time, I should be hatching GLO Project chicks and the whole cycle continues.

Once I sort the boys from girls on the 4 week olds (Blues Mixed Mystery Chicks) in a couple weeks, I’ll have a better idea of who I am keeping or not.  I was pretty sure for a while that they are all boys, but now I’m doubting that.  Regardless, it’s just better to wait a couple more weeks to more easily tell.

Ok, I have lots to do and little time to do it in, so, until next time, HAPPY SPRING!