Ever go on an Easter egg hunt? It's more difficult when the eggs aren't gaily colored.
Seriously, though, they DO go into their coop to lay their eggs -- sometimes. Other times, they lay them under the canoe, or in some hidey-hole somewhere.
On 01/13/2014 09:48 PM, Tina Travis wrote:
Seriously, though, they DO go into their coop to lay their eggs -- sometimes. Other times, they lay them under the canoe, or in some hidey-hole somewhere.
On 01/13/2014 09:48 PM, Tina Travis wrote:
How do you find the eggs? lol
Tina Travis
ElkHorn Alpacas
Warrenton,MO.63383
From: Ray Drouillard
Sent: 1/13/2014 7:42 PM
To: CHICKENS-101@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [CHICKENS-101] Chickens in the cold
Our chickens were perching in the trees and on the porch rail even when the temperature went down way below zero. They are pretty tough birds.
We have a trampled path through the snow from our driveway to our door. Once in a while, in the evening, I would see something big fly past my window and be gone before I could take a good look. Just a few days ago, I got a better look. It turns out that the chickens fly a good 50 feet from the path to the pine trees. Yes, some chickens CAN fly. I suspect that it's kind of like sprinting would be to us, so they only do it when they need to. Still, they like to roost twenty or thirty feet up in the trees. The trees are often covered with snow, but they like to roost near the trunk.
By the way, the hen I saw flying was a leghorn. A few years ago, it was an americauna that took panicked flight when I was using the snow blower. I have seen pretty much all of the breeds flying up twenty or more feet to roost in a tree.
As it is now, all of our chickens are free range because no pen will hold them. We would need to get one with a covered top.
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