The Farm*Homestead*Garden Blog

All things farm, garden, homestead related from the Catsndogs4us family.

Our life on a wild, woodland homestead.

Sunday, June 5, 2022

Chicks growing up and integrating with the flock

 This years' chicks have had a little extra challenge. They aren't all the same age, not even close enough the brood completely together. I don't mind a good challenge and have made it work. First off we ordered some chicks from an area feed store and the different breeds came in over a 3 week period of time. One breed was a full week earlier than the first expected week which led to an even bigger gap between the purchased chicks and a small group of bantams that we were hatching from within our own flock. So we did 2 brooders, one brooder for the chicks all within that 3 week early range and the other brooder for the bantams who are about a month younger than the oldest chicks in the first group. I kept the two brooders next to each other so both groups of chicks could see each other. Once I started bringing chicks outside I had both groups mingle at times. Later when it was time to move to the coop-within larger brooder cages, I kept both groups near each other. It's all worked fairly well. The older group is not fully integrated with the adult flock and the younger group are getting close to full, safe integration. I would fully integrate the bantams this week but as I have 2 weeks of work left at the school I will probably have to wait until that time is up, we will see as time goes. I feel more comfortable with integrating bantams when I am around all day. This weekend so far they have been out with the flock for several hours and it has gone well so far. It looks like all the purchased chicks are female, as for the bantams it looks like 2 males, 2 females and the silkie will be the tiebreaker. I'm slightly leaning female for her. Silkies can take many months to reveal gender.

Not the best picture but two brooder cages next to each other.

Bantams

older chicks

That time we had a scheduled 4 hour power outage, small EcoFlow power supply kept everyone comfy and warm.



One bantam mama hen- frizzled  bantam cochin

Other bantam mama silkie (we have a few possibles not sure which silkie eggs they were.

outside time for large and small chicks.

The growing bantams

Silkie- hen was one of our silkies, rooster was Mr. Pain our silkie rooster.

Polish/silkie mix "Polkie" they are called. Silkie hen x white crested black Polish roo

Black frizzle chick Frizzle bantam cochin hen x spitzhauben roo

Brown/black frizzle chick- frizzled cochin hen x spithauben or polish roo

Speckled frizzled chick- cohcin hen x sptzhauben or silkie roo (still rying to work this one out).

Better look at the brown/black chick's colors




Some of the old timers hanging out.

some of the older chicks






2 comments:

  1. The drizzled ones are a hoot. We seem to get just the basics up here.

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    1. The frizzles seem to be becoming more common. Hopefully they will make their way to AK before too long.The mum of these babies was just a random find in a feed store (a frizzled cochin bantam). The feed store got in a mixed bunch of bantams. They had no idea any were frizzled so I pointed it out to them and showed how to tell. Even at a couple days old you can see the slight curl to the feathers.

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