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  1. 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...
  2. 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...
  3. 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...
  4. chrismahon

    Hi From SW TX!

    Hi Dimo and welcome to the forum. I assume you are in Southwest Texas? Quite a collection you have already and lucky with the bug problem- we are plagued with red mite here because of all the wild birds.
  5. chrismahon

    Cock fertility or infertility?

    Our Blue Laced Wyandottes are getting old (5 years now) so we decided to let a local breeder have eggs to get a stock of our bloodline and save us breeding because space is limited. Our line is much larger than the breed standard. The breed standard is over 4Kg for a cock, but most lines run...
  6. chrismahon

    Cock alarm calls

    Now that Spring has arrived we are spending late afternoons in the chicken enclosure watching and listening to them. Our TNN cock Jean-Claude and our Wyandotte cock Zebedee have the clearest outlook to the surroundings. Their alarm calls are universally recognised and send all the hens running...
  7. chrismahon

    Cankers- how should we treat them?

    I've always thought that cankers in the mouth were a fungal growth, but apparently that isn't the case at all. They are the result of a parasite attack, the organism causing it is Trichomonas Gallinae. It is therefore contagious, but fortunately it has poor resistance to an external environment...
  8. chrismahon

    Mineral supplements -Nettex v Verm-X

    May be worth sharing this recent experience. We don't use feed additives at all believing that the pellets contain all they need. But this isn't necessarily the case in an older bird that may need a boost of something. I have read that a chicken eating excess grit or soil is suffering from a...
  9. chrismahon

    Trigger Happy Chicken Feeder

    We've ordered some of these because we have a major sparrow problem and the run isn't big enough for a Grandpa's treadle feeder. They are very cheap at £5 each plus £3.50 postage -but it is only one component in the feeder assembly -you have to get the rest together yourself. Anyone have any...
  10. chrismahon

    Hello from Oregon

    Hello ChickMomma and welcome to the forum. Breed standards around the world have differences, so it can be rather difficult to identify them. The second photo looks something like a Cream Legbar crossed with Faverolles and I think it's her that laid the blue egg. The hen on the left in the first...
  11. chrismahon

    Digestive impaction and yellow poo

    We have three Buff Orpington sisters, now nearly 5 years old. Each one has in turn has had a digestive impaction characterised by a full crop in the morning but not eating and very little poo. The first was Verity. Her problem appeared to be caused by a cherry stone jammed against worms in the...
  12. chrismahon

    Hi from Suffolk

    Hi Janukey and welcome to the forum. Unusual thing to be hatching at this time of year, but if you have the space that you can keep them warm then it's not really a problem. Good result if you got 5 from 6 eggs. What incubator were you using and did you run it 'dry' to start?
  13. chrismahon

    Hello from Groeslon, Gwynedd

    The www.accidentalsmallholder.net is probably what you are looking for Dave. Loads of info and a forum as well which covers every aspect. This forum is still the best place by far to get chicken advice though.
  14. chrismahon

    Hello from Groeslon, Gwynedd

    Welcome to the forum Dave. Registering as a smallholding is a rather confusing term. What you will actually be doing is registering each category of your animals with DEFRA and Animal Health. In our case we had sheep and more than 50 chickens, so we had a Holding (CHP?) number allocated for the...
  15. chrismahon

    Hi from West wales

    Hello Kel3 and welcome to the forum. Afraid I know almost nothing about ducks -hand reared a couple of stray Mallard chicks and that's it.
  16. chrismahon

    Marans

    We've just been over to a local breeder and bought three Marans at around 25 weeks old. €20 each we thought was a good price. Three different colours, although there are far more Nationally with over 1000 registered breeders, being noir (black), bleu (blue) and coucou (cuckoo). Now the first...
  17. chrismahon

    Incubating refrigerated eggs

    We have a problem here, the coldest place in the house is about 22 degrees (unheated) whereas in the UK we stored our eggs in the cellar at 12 degrees. We run a complicated system. Non-hatching eggs are not a problem, but potential hatching eggs are kept for 7 days before being eaten. At these...
  18. chrismahon

    Artificial insemination

    We have a problem at the moment. Our pet cock Bottom is far too old and is probably infertile at 6 ½ years -although he is still keen! His son Basil, who is 4 ½, is suffering with mobility. He is too big to catch and tread the hens with any reliability. If he does try too hard there will be risk...
  19. chrismahon

    Hello from Norfolk. UK

    We don't bother hatching with eggs older than 7 days because then we start to get failures KittyKat. But a lot depends on storage and handling and I have heard claims of hatches from eggs much older than that. Another factor is going to be cleanliness if you are manual turning, because of the...
  20. chrismahon

    Hello from Norfolk. UK

    I was told they need at least 24 hours to settle Kittykat. So that contradicts your information. But they sit in the incubator for a while to warm up, so maybe you should switch off the auto turning for the first day.
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