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  1. chrismahon

    Hello from France

    It took us 4 years to sell our house in England NicolsT due entirely to estate agent's lack of market knowledge, but it was worth the wait because as we gained experience we changed our purchase requirements considerably. Hopefully yours won't take that long. Nice weather down here as well and...
  2. chrismahon

    Hello from France

    Rather late I know but welcome to the forum NicolsT. When you posted this we were just about to sign the Acte de Vente for our new home in Mirande, Gers and we were frantically loading the van and trailer for the first of 16 trips to move the household, gardening and chicken stuff. The chickens...
  3. chrismahon

    Hello from South of France

    Hi Guillaume and welcome to the forum from an 'ex-pat' living near Auch in the Gers. Sure your English is better than my French! We use Google translate a lot as well. We started looking for property in the Lot when we came over 5 years ago, but ended up down here after the area was recommended...
  4. chrismahon

    Hello from Bulgaria

    A wall paper stripper wouldn't work Saraht- what you need is a fine jet of pressurised steam to get into all the cracks and gaps.
  5. chrismahon

    Hello from Bulgaria

    Hello and welcome Saraht. You may find plastic distorts badly in hot temperatures- we brought a Solway over from the UK and there is no way we would risk it outside in Summer (I am a retired plastics engineer). I don't expect an Omlet coop would survive down here either. The other factor is the...
  6. chrismahon

    Paralysis again!

    Just three weeks on from my previous 'paralysis' post and I found Poppy was missing when the coop was checked last night. She was in the run, collapsed in a corner unable to stand but was fine a few hours earlier. Bought her in and she started to overheating as before so she had 50mg of Asprin...
  7. chrismahon

    Crowing hens

    Sorting through old issues of Practical Poultry (with a view to reducing the volume when we move) I came across 'Fun Facts' in the March 2011 issue. "If a cockerel isn't present in a flock of hens, the dominant hen will sometimes take on the role, stop laying and begin to crow. This is rare...
  8. chrismahon

    Paralysis- brought back from 'death'.

    Had a real shock days ago during the early morning coop cleaning. One of our young Leghorn Bantams (Poppy) was lying 'dead' on the floor. No signs of life at all but not stone cold, so she must have died in the last hour. She was fine the previous evening and was roosting on her usual perch. We...
  9. chrismahon

    Dropped eggs at night

    Thought it worth sharing this experience. We have on occasion had eggs dropped from the hens roosting on the perches at night. There are several reasons for this that we were previously aware of:- Fright- a predator or unusual disturbance. Stress- overcrowding leading to fighting for perch space...
  10. chrismahon

    New member

    Hello Alan2886 and welcome to the forum from another resident in France enjoying the very mild Winter indeed. Our chickens like it too.
  11. chrismahon

    Botulism?

    Seems we had our first case of Botulism yesterday afternoon. Ruby, a French Buff Orpington, was fine at 2.00pm but at 3.00pm was struggling to walk. We first suspected an injury and put Arnica gel on a hot knee joint. But after watching her wobbling about and then seeing her fall off a low perch...
  12. chrismahon

    Laced Wyandottes

    When we started breeding Blue Laced Wyandottes we were told to expect 25% of the hatch to be gold laced and 25% to be buff laced, which is exactly what we got. These are the derivative colours of 'blue', which in reality is grey. I was rather puzzled by the terminology, because lacing is the...
  13. chrismahon

    Not the postman

    The dog started barking at midday, which is usually because the postie has a package that needs signing for. So I went outside to see and was confronted by the sight of a TANK parked in the driveway. A soldier wandered over to me and explained they were on manoeuvres and could they park it in...
  14. chrismahon

    Hello...new member.

    Hello Jay and welcome. Tasmania must be an amazing place to live. You mentioning Turkeys reminds me of our trip out yesterday to order one for Noel, because you can't buy a whole turkey in the supermarkets down here. The place breeds about 100 for sale every year -Gers Noir (black Gascone)...
  15. chrismahon

    Hi from the cold wet uplands of north Yorkshire

    Hello from the warm dry hills of Gascony (at the moment) Themuttsknutts. Thing about here is it can be 20C one day and -10C the next though! Do you breed these chickens or are they just 'pets'? Nice that they have so much land to roam in. Ours have to be very securely enclosed here because the...
  16. chrismahon

    Hello from Greece

    Hello Eleanna and welcome to the forum. I visited Alonissos by Dolphin from Skopelos many years ago (perhaps 30). Seem to remember half the island was a military base and no-one at all spoke any English- a lovely unspoilt place. Rhode Island Reds are a good laying breed. Yours have travelled a...
  17. chrismahon

    Happy to be here instead!

    Welcome to the forum Exotica. I've read your post- sounds like the breeder is a complete idiot. Setting aside the money, those chicks should have been properly transported. Hope your others are doing fine and keep any dogs well away from them. Even if they don't get eaten it will stress the chicks.
  18. chrismahon

    Hi...just joined

    Hello Bev and welcome to the forum. We've had a few cockerels just dumped on us but managed to re-home most of them. When you add birds you need to increase space. This can be achieved by reducing the available run area and restoring it when the new birds are added. As you say, stress could...
  19. chrismahon

    Nearly lost Basil yesterday

    Basil is a 5 year old Buff Orpington cock. Built to show standards unfortunately, this means he is as wide as he is long and weighs in at 6Kg. This also means he has very poor tolerance to heat and yesterday it hit 39C in the shade. Having given him extra drinking water and stood his feet in...
  20. chrismahon

    Drowned chick

    We put 12 Wyandotte eggs into the hatcher, which is a Suro20 (without the rocking cradle) wrapped in extra insulation. The temperature was 37.0C and humidity set to 75%. It took over 24 hours to stabilise the humidity, which I think is an inherent problem with the software controlling the pump...
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