It’s not easy raising chickens for meat.
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- UndercoverElephant
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- hardworkinghippy
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Peter, They don't care but I know what they'll eat and what they won't eat and where they're likely to make dust baths, so I protect the vulnerable veg with a combination of sticks, cages and fruit boxes.How do they know which are the weeds and which are the plants?
I've a set in Flickr here with lots more photos of the chickens doing their thing in the garden : http://www.flickr.com/photos/hardworkin ... 288270606/:
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You obviously know your chickens, judging by your plants. Does laying a few sticks on the ground (e.g. around the borage?) keep them off then? And a few upright sticks away from the courgettes?hardworkinghippy wrote:Peter, They don't care but I know what they'll eat and what they won't eat and where they're likely to make dust baths, so I protect the vulnerable veg with a combination of sticks, cages and fruit boxes.
Peter.
Does anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the seconds to hours?
- hardworkinghippy
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Yes, that works for certain plants. Here's an example - these two photos are taken from the same view :
The sticks help to keep dogs off too. (We've got 5 mini-diggers )
The sticks help to keep dogs off too. (We've got 5 mini-diggers )
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- hardworkinghippy
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Pumpkins.
I often use pumpkins to start off a new part of the garden as the chickens really clean around them well and we grow a lot because the pigs love them and they keep well for us too.
I often use pumpkins to start off a new part of the garden as the chickens really clean around them well and we grow a lot because the pigs love them and they keep well for us too.
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- hardworkinghippy
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Yes we do.
Foxes take the odd chicken - but only one at a time because we shut them up at night. It's rare though because we have six dogs and we're here all the time.
Foxes take the odd chicken - but only one at a time because we shut them up at night. It's rare though because we have six dogs and we're here all the time.
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- the mad cyclist
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For anyone who is interested, here are a few photos of my homemade chicken killing cone. I made it last year when I had 10 cockerels to dispatch; at our place it’s a one-man operation. The only alteration I would make is to enlarge the neck hole. It’s a bit of a struggle getting their heads through, and since I concuss them first, I don’t want them regaining consciousness before I do the business.
Let nobody suppose that simple, inexpensive arrangements are faulty because primitive. If constructed correctly and in line with natural laws they are not only right, but preferable to fancy complicated devices.
Rolfe Cobleigh
Rolfe Cobleigh
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I used a 36" plastic traffic cone with the tip cut off. Like you I found that I had to cut off more of the tip to make the hole bigger but I had let the birds get past optimum size. Small turkeys by size, 10 pounds dressed or better. A disagreeable job that is only better if you can do it smoothly and with one sure stroke to be as humane as possible.the mad cyclist wrote:For anyone who is interested, here are a few photos of my homemade chicken killing cone. I made it last year when I had 10 cockerels to dispatch; at our place it’s a one-man operation. The only alteration I would make is to enlarge the neck hole. It’s a bit of a struggle getting their heads through, and since I concuss them first, I don’t want them regaining consciousness before I do the business.