I went about my normal routine that I do every weekend. I am always up by 630am if not earlier, the product of having to get up at 4am every day during the week. I do my thing and head out to the chickens. I give both the old hens and the babies scratch grains and we all chat about what is new and the latest gossip.
I got around to the babies nursery building and I peeked in and what do you know....way in the back of the nursery I spied this:
Well this sparked a whole laundry list of things to do! I had to call the U-Haul company, call the phone, water, and TV companies to have service stopped. So much to do! I had to scramble eggs! So much to do so little time. Not to mention it is hotter than all get out.
I finished chatting with the chickens and hand feeding them some grass and then headed inside to start things rolling.
I cooked up a little more than a dozen eggs. Why you may ask? There is a good reason. I gave the older hens the scrambled eggs to fill their bellies (ok ok their gizzards) with protein. This will discourage pecking when we integrate the babies into the big coop with them. The eggs and protein also seem to make the hens a little more docile and easier going. This will help the introduction go smoother.
I woke up my hubby, and son and had a good breakfast, while we talked about how to move the babies with as little trauma as possible. We devised and plan and out the door we went. First we had to get all the babies into their nursery. Then we had to keep them there while we closed off their pop door. To do this we just stapled some chicken wire over the pop door opening. Then I picked up all the bricks holding down the big blue tarp and took out all the stuff from inside their nursery.
Together the three of us slowly picked up the nursery and we walked it to a new location out of the mud and chicken poo. The babies were not too cooperative so we decided not to try to walk them around to the big coop door as we had planed. Instead we took off the top of the nursery and I started grabbing birds. I would quickly grab a chicken and hand her off to my Son who would carry her over to the coop where Hubby was manning the door. We did this over and over, one by one, chicken by chicken for all 25. It took some time and I only got pooped on once, and bit once. Not too bad considering I was really scaring them. No chickens (or people) were harmed during this process. Although, I was wing slapped in the face a few times. Thankfully I did not loose my glasses!
Once we had them all in the main run, I filled their waters while the boys mixed their feed. Just like changing a dog's food you want to mix the old with the new - we had to mix the chick feed with the layer feed. I then slowly corralled all the birds from the run into the coop, and we shut the pop door for about an hour. Since our babies were used to using a pop door they knew how it worked and knew that beyond the pop door was either shelter or a yard depending which way they were going.
They were hot and they duked it out a little bit but all in all the hour they were locked in together with the old hens seemed to go well. While they were locked up, we quickly dismantled the nursery and set the pieces behind the coop to wash off in the rain - should we get any- and to get it out of the site of the babies. Out of site out of mind. They will forget they had a different home and will only know their new home as their only home. We left the fencing up for now. It was too hot by this time and I was melting into a gross puddle in my insulated boots.
We also found out that our one mystery chick in indeed a roo. He has been crowing for a few weeks now. He is aggressive when I had feed them grass but he has not tried to attack - yet. He seemed pretty docile when I grabbed him to move him. Maybe he will be a nice roo.....hey a girl can hope!
Now I have to find some of the golf balls we have laying around to put in the nest boxes. Why golf balls you ask? Well the golf balls with look like eggs to the chickens and it will teach the babies where to lay their eggs - in the nest boxes. It works quite well. This way using golf balls I can keep collecting the eggs several times a day so they don't get trampled but still leave a visual learning aid for the new hens.
I only have one new hen laying so far but the rest will start soon. This is kinda early for them. We got these peeps April 4, 2011, and today July 31, 2011, 3.5 months later, they are starting to lay. The new eggs will be pretty tiny bit totally whole. Soon they will start laying huge eggs and double and triple yolks while their bodies figure things out and they settle into a laying routine. Now a new issue starts for me - soon I will be getting up to 32 eggs A DAY! I need to order some egg cartons....and make a sign for the road.....and buy a bigger fridge...make more cookies, cakes, and goodies. oh my.
Showing posts with label nursery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nursery. Show all posts
Sunday, July 31, 2011
Friday, June 3, 2011
Building the nursery
The peeps have been in the basement way too long now. I am going broke buying air fresheners! They need out! At has been storming every day around these parts so it has been difficult to get time to build the nursery for the peeps. We finally found a small break in the weather and ran with it. We let the big chickens run loose so they don't freak out over the construction going on beside their coop and run.
First we had to mow the grass where the nursery and run will go. We could have left at as they will eat and trample it down to mud, but we did not want to loose them in the high grass.
Then we had to get down the nursery walls from where we store them up in the rafters of the barn.
Zip tie the wall together.
Add braces for the 'roof'.
Add scrap pieces of plywood for the roof, and the front with a hole cut in it for a pop door.
Cover the whole thing in a tarp and secure it with bricks.
Cut holes in tarp for the pop door and the sun roof/entry point.
Get the young strapping son to pound in the T Posts for their run.
String the wire around the run.
Add the netting and get me stuck inside the run. I had to be quite the contortionist to get out once we had all the wire and netting on! Good thing I am flexible!
Line the run with bricks and it is ready to go. It is a little shorter than the permanent run but that is ok. The peeps will only be staying in the nursery for a few months then they well be integrated into the big coop with the older hens.
About that time the storms were rolling through so we could not put the peeps in. That would have to wait for another day. The older chickens were right there to help us and lend they building expertise 2 cents.
We quickly cleaned up, put all the tools away and wrangled the chickens back into the their run. We will have to check the weather to try to get a break from these storms to get the peeps moved.
First we had to mow the grass where the nursery and run will go. We could have left at as they will eat and trample it down to mud, but we did not want to loose them in the high grass.
Then we had to get down the nursery walls from where we store them up in the rafters of the barn.
Zip tie the wall together.
Add braces for the 'roof'.
Add scrap pieces of plywood for the roof, and the front with a hole cut in it for a pop door.
Cover the whole thing in a tarp and secure it with bricks.
Cut holes in tarp for the pop door and the sun roof/entry point.
Get the young strapping son to pound in the T Posts for their run.
String the wire around the run.
Add the netting and get me stuck inside the run. I had to be quite the contortionist to get out once we had all the wire and netting on! Good thing I am flexible!
Line the run with bricks and it is ready to go. It is a little shorter than the permanent run but that is ok. The peeps will only be staying in the nursery for a few months then they well be integrated into the big coop with the older hens.
About that time the storms were rolling through so we could not put the peeps in. That would have to wait for another day. The older chickens were right there to help us and lend they building expertise 2 cents.
We quickly cleaned up, put all the tools away and wrangled the chickens back into the their run. We will have to check the weather to try to get a break from these storms to get the peeps moved.
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