Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Chicks Become Chickens

The sun rose up like a diamond over the mountains. We had no idea our flock of chickens was increasing from six to ten hens.


The Day We Purchased Four New Chickens



That morning, Paul and I found ourselves shopping in IFA ( Intermountain Farmers Association). We were getting some feed and supplies there. As we walked in we heard the little peeps of the new spring chicks basking under warm lights in the silver troughs near the entrance of the store. There were a lot of chicks to choose from, Leg Horn, Golden Sex-Link, Ducks, Turkeys and Barred Rock Pullets. Though I  dreamed of having ducks and turkeys one day, our eyes wandered to the Barred Rock. We had done pet sitting for a few Barred Rock Hens and they were a delight. Their cackles sounded like gentle laughter. The next thing we knew, we were carrying out a little box filled with 2 Barred Rock Pullets.




I sat the carrier on my lap in the truck and I could here them peep and scuffle about. When we got home we set up the large kennel in the main coop with water spiked with electrolytes and placed the feeder with medicated chick starter inside. An infrared lamp was installed. We poured the little chicks out of their carrier and into their new home.




Barred Rock Pullets- Henny Penny and Betsy



We like them so much, my husband and grandson took the little carrier box back to the store ...


 


... and asked for a refill! "Two more, please!"

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Four Barred Rock Pullets

Meet again Henny Penny and Betsy with their new coop mates,
 Cali ( Caliente) and Peck.


The Chicken Sun Ritual


The afternoon sun made it's way into the coop in long streaks of warm clear light.
I was surprised and enchanted to see the little chick instinctively open her wing to her first sliver of sunlight.


Chicken's First Sun Ritual




 4 weeks later... they are venturing out of the kennel into the main coop. In the picture below, Henny Penny is always in front. She is quite the adventurer. The other are leery after being pecked by the older hens. We are designing an escape section in the main coop for our little young hens.


Four weeks old Barred Rock Pullets




Betsy is now bigger than her bowl! 4 weeks old

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Barred Rock Pullets 4 weeks old.



Here are all the supplies we needed. We already had a kennel. It came in real handy. You can slip a  stick through the bars when the chicks get old enough to roost.
























Galvanized Round Chick Feeder, 6"
Just add your own mason jar to this feeder.



Chicks Turn Teenager


Barred Rock Pullets about 3months old





Egg Laying Adults



Peck is now 5 months old.

3 month old Peck was injured by Lucy our aggressive Rhode Island Red Hen. Peck was bleeding a bit from the neck. We scooped up her quivering body and quelled her inside in the kitchen in a kennel ( See? The kennel comes in real handy). We applied Mercurochrome and I held her in my lap with my hands lightly on her wings. * She relaxed and nodded off to sleep. We kept her overnight and found that her wound was healing nicely. she was eating and drinking. We released her in a couple of days back to the coop. Since that episode, she has been particularly friendly running up to greet me and following me underfoot.


Chicks Become Chickens- These hens are very friendly.



 The Barred Rock hens lay the reddish rust colored eggs.

Little Mama Chicken with her two white daughters Venus and Jupiter.
We collect a rainbow of colors everyday from all our hens. We also have two Black Sex-Links ( Madonna and Faith), two Rhode Island Reds ( Lucy and Kitty Hawk), and one Leg Horn ( Venus). Mama, our first chicken, hasn't been identified yet.  She appears in my post Feeding My Chickens. She is tiny and lays small white or pale beige eggs. Above is a picture of Mama
 Can anyone identify the dark grey and white hen?



These barred rock hens are the friendliest hens we have. They do really well in the freezing cold of winter and are the last to go into their coop at night.  We use an infra red lamp for their insulated roosting area when it gets in the 20's or teens or sub zero temperatures.


When we lived in Southern California, we would turn on the lamp when it was 50 degrees. That temperature was cold for us then and we thought they needed it. But these girls do fine here in Utah weather. They say the red colored lamp does not bother them at night.


Related posts:

Feeding My Chickens- A collection of gourmet recipes that my girls love.

Raising Chickens In The City Our first experience with chickens.

Hurray For Llama Beans - A New Green Lawn

In April we dug up the old lawn in the garden and threw all the clod of grass and roots into a mound or knoll along the fence. Then we sprinkled llama beans (manure) evenly over the the ground.
We covered the area with llama bean (manure)



The little llama beans protect the seeds from the winds and are just the right height to cover them. I run a rake gently over the beans in an up and down motion just enough to vibrate the seeds down a bit to cover them. The llama beans are a balanced fertilizer and keeps the grass seeds and surrounding area moist.










Below you can see green blades of grass are peeking thought the layer of llama manure we applied.  It took awhile to sprout with the weekly snows and cold temperatures. But Mother's Day I noticed the welcome green haze coming up from the lawn. The right side was planted first. The left side of the garden lawn was seeded a week later. Notice in the far upper right hand corner of the picture there is the little knoll we built from recycled clods of grass. We will plant wildflowers there when the weather warms.


A new green lawn is sprouting



Animals In A Storm


Cattle facing northeast in a storm.

I spotted these cattle one blustery morning. I was touched by the sight of their backs turned toward the storm. I had seen this in western paintings and perhaps in a few movies but to see this in real life was very moving. Animals are connected to the web of life. They move through their challenges with dignity and grace. I have always admired in their natural instincts.





Horses with no complaints.

These horses face northeast away from the storm. Snow collects on their back sides without any complaint. The animals take what nature gives to them. They allow rather than survive.

Rose In A Storm- By Jon Katz

This book was highly recommended by my friend. I am now reading katz's book on dog training and I find his writing very healing and comforting. If you love dogs, his books will make you love dogs even more. When you click on the image below, it will take you to Jon Katz books on amazon. I buy all my books on this site.
Product Description

Rose In A Storm
From New York Times bestselling author Jon Katz comes a moving and powerful novel, the first one inspired by life on his celebrated Bedlam Farm—and perceptively told from the point of view of Rose, a dedicated working dog.



Rose is determined and focused, keeping the sheep out of danger and protecting the other creatures on the farm she calls home. But of all those she’s looked after since coming to the farm as a puppy, it is Sam, the farmer, whom she watches most carefully.



Awoken one cold midwinter night during lambing season, Rose and Sam struggle into the snowy dark to do their work. The ever observant Rose has seen a change in her master of late, ever since Sam’s wife disappeared one day. She senses something else in the air as well: A storm is coming, but not like any of the ones she’s seen over the years. This storm feels different, bigger, more foreboding.



When an epic blizzard hits the region, it will take all of Rose’s resolve, resourcefulness, and courage to help Sam save the farm and the creatures who live there.



Jon Katz consulted with animal behavior scientists to create his unique and convincing vision of the world as seen through the eyes of a dog. Poignant, thrilling, and beautifully wrought, Rose in a Storm is a wonderfully original and powerful tale from a gifted storyteller.