The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence

When I let the girls’ together at the end of each day they instantly switch sides. They rush to the feed dishes on the other side as if the food in the opposite dish must be better despite being identical.

I give the girls’ some greens every day at mid morning. If I have a cabbage heart I hang it on wire from the gate. I did this this morning on the little girls side and the big girls’ frantically walked up and down the wire wanting to get to the cabbage. I hung some on the inside of the big girls gate and the little girls’ tried to peck at it from their side.

Okay I can solve this. I moved the cabbage from the little girls’ side to hang on the other side of the big girls’ gate. Instant harmony as they could all peck away together.

Cabbage

Cabbage

Honey isn’t with them as she is in the nest box laying her egg. Sparkle isn’t with them as she is a bit of a loner and shows no interest in joining in with the other girls’. Even if they have a dish of mash or scrambled egg Sparkle never joins in and she is always wandering about on her own and doesn’t let the other girls get too close her. They all have such different characters.

Posted in Chickens | 2 Comments

A chicken’s patio

I have always liked the fact that the chicken coop and feeding station were on the patio area as any pine shavings and spilt food can easily be swept up.

The newly separated area doesn’t work so well as the shavings get scratched from the coop into the soil and some food makes it to the soil too.

I decided to make another little patio area out of anything I could find in the garden. We had some paving stones that we used as stepping stones in the garden when we wanted to do some weeding. They had become so overgrown that were hidden and never used any more.

I found them all and gathered them up to make an area in front of the little coop which is used as a nest box and for the food and water. It’s a bit makeshift and I’m not sure how well it will work but as it hasn’t cost anything I thought it worth a try.

A chicken patio

A chicken patio

Okay it’s not a patio as such more a selection of paving stones jig sawed together but I think it will do the job.

Posted in Chickens | Leave a comment

Finishing the roof

Yesterday afternoon we finished work at lunch time so decided to get on with fitting some more roof panels.

Because of the way the beams run we could only overlap the two centre strips. The outer strips couldn’t overlap and the water from the current panels would pour into the centre of the run. To get round this my husband came up with a plan to use corrugated plastic panels over the outer strips and leave them in place permanently. There will still be plenty of open space to the run when the other panels are opened up.

We fitted these outer panels first which wasn’t the easiest of jobs to do. They needed to be cut to fit around the wooden posts.

We then fitted two overlapping panels in each of the remaining two centre strips. My husband thought duck tape over the joins in the wooden beams might stop water dripping in but we soon found that it wouldn’t stick to the wood. Since I took these photos I have peeled all the grey tape off again.

The roof panels are completed

The roof panels are completed

The run is dug over

The run is dug over

I then dug over the entire run as it was really compacted from us standing on it while working and also I thought it would help it to dry out. The girls had a great time as there were lots of worms and they each got a share. It was hard work as it’s now a big space to dig over.

Today my husband has decided to try sealing the joins in the wood with silicon sealant. It is a clear outdoor sealant and says it can be used on damp surfaces so we are hopeful this will work. It is forecast to rain all week so we should soon be able to see how dry the run stays.

Topaz likes to get into the new little tree in the run and snack on the leaves. Usually I don’t have my camera with me but just as I  finished taking the photos of the roof panels she got up into the tree.

Topaz in the tree

Topaz in the tree

Topaz is the only one of them that does this.

Finally I can never resist a perching photo and just had to take this one of the little girls together.

Four

The little girls perch together

From the left we have Sparkle then Topaz then Amber and Honey on the right.

Posted in Chickens | 4 Comments

The rosemary

I thought that because the rosemary was so pungent it would be safe from the girls but I was wrong. They have all decided that they like scratching in it and are trashing it.

The rosemary is being shredded

The rosemary is being shredded

I was going to see if I could find something at the garden centre to protect it but my husband said he would make something from the left over weld mesh.

The new rosemary protector

The new rosemary protector

Sparkle and Amber inspect it

Sparkle and Amber inspect it

I have dug it into the ground and the heavy stone on top will keep it in place and make it safe for the girls to sit or stand on if they want to. The joins in the weld mesh are covered by duct tape. Hopefully now the rosemary will have a chance to grow.

Posted in Chickens | 6 Comments

An update on all things recent

We have been so busy with work this week with two big functions on, that I haven’t had time to blog, so I thought I would do an update.

Firstly Honey’s eye is much better, it has healed much more quickly than I expected. It looks pretty much back to normal now.

Honey's eye is looking much better

Honey’s eye is looking much better, this was yesterday, five days after the accident

The girls have been separated for two weeks now. It’s harder work for me and I miss interacting so easily with which ever set is on the furthest side as I have to go through their gate to be with them. I am alternating which side they are on every two days.

I know the girls are happier when they are together and they have twice as much space when they are together.

Honey especially wants to be with the big girls and is always at the gate trying to slip through. She has managed a couple of times and yesterday she managed to get under the wire through the tiniest gap. I have now heaped the soil up against it.

It is such a shame as I would dearly love to have them altogether but I can’t let the little girls get plucked any more.

I know this won’t break the habit because Pepper and Dotty are still plucking each other. Pepper plucks Dotty’s head and neck and Dotty plucks Pepper’s bottom. Now that Pepper only has Dotty to pluck feathers from, Dotty’s head is suddenly looking worse. Her head feathers had started to grow back but are now disappearing again.

Dotty's head is missing feathers

Dotty’s head is missing feathers

Amber's head and neck look awful

Amber’s head and neck look awful

Amber is giving me a lot of chat as usual as you can see from her open beak.

Sparkle's bare bottom does have some black dots appearing

Sparkle’s bare bottom does have some black dots appearing

Topaz looks pristine

Topaz looks pristine

Topaz is the only girl that doesn’t look plucked but when the girls were together I did pick up some beautiful Topaz feathers. Luckily there weren’t enough plucked from her to notice.

My plan is to stick with it until the little girls are fully feathered again (even if that is after the moult) and then try them together again. If the feather plucking restarts I will then separate them again.

They have an hour in the morning together when they are occupied by feeding, drinking and snoozing or dust bathing and an hour together before bedtime when they are again occupied feeding, drinking and scratching. If they lose an odd feather during this time, like Topaz, it probably won’t make much difference. What I don’t want is them being ruined like Amber.

The other thing to update on is Topaz and her egg laying or not as is actually the case. We thought she may have laid her first egg a few weeks ago but I now know that it wasn’t her and was probably Honey’s egg.

I was out at the time and my husband noticed Topaz was missing for while then she started shouting and he looked in the nest box and found an egg so assumed it was hers. Since then she has gone into the nest box every day for about half an hour and then she comes out shouting her head off. I go and investigate and each time have been surprised to find no egg. I think she is practising and will start laying soon.

The other give away was that the egg that day was large (for a banty egg) and round which is what Honey’s eggs are like. Sparkle’s eggs are small and narrow and I would expect Topaz to lay a similar egg.

I feel sure she will start laying soon and I will know when she does.

Tomorrow we are going to start fitting the roof panels on the remaining open part of the run and I can’t wait to get it all under cover. It has been horrible poop picking in a boggy run. Once it is covered I will fork the whole run over to help it dry out which will take some time but which will be so nice once it’s dry.

I would just like to see some feathers coming through on the little girls. I think there are a few pins showing on Sparkle’s bottom and possibly one on Amber’s head but one is a bit disappointing. I suppose I must be patient.

Posted in Chickens | 4 Comments

Improvements

The child gate works like a dream. First thing in the morning when I would go into the run Honey and Amber would always be putting their heads in the hinge corner of the gate or trying to squeeze past me to have a quick forage on the outside of the gate. When this happened I would hold the gate open and wait for them to come back in and have the corn tub on stand by if extra persuading was needed.

It always worried me that if something spooked them and they flew off they wouldn’t be able to find their way back. I always ended up coming through the gate stooped down with my hands cupped against them to try to keep them in. The odd thing was that they only ever did this first thing in the morning.

This morning it was so good to have the barrier of the child gate in place. They couldn’t put their heads in the hinged corner of the gate and they couldn’t slip past me to the outside. As awful as the accident with Honey was, the good that has come from it, is that it made us put up the child gate. It just wasn’t something we had ever thought of before but not only does it safe guard the girls from this kind of accident but it also allows me to slip through the gate easily without trying to hold them away.

The other improvement is Honey’s eye. It is only the second day since the accident and her eye is now half way open.

Honey's eye still looks poorly but is half open now

Honey’s eye still looks poorly but is half open now

This much improvement to her eye in such a short time is really encouraging.

The other improvement we want to make is to cover the last section of the run. We intended to make the decision once we could tell how the run was holding up in the rain. It has been raining all morning and the uncovered section is now a quagmire with muddy puddles collecting.

Before the really heavy rain it was already very wet at the border where the panels end because all the water that runs down the panels gets dumped on to the next section of the run but after more rain the entire outside area was water logged.

The uncovered half of the run is a quagmire

The uncovered half of the run is a quagmire

It's a mass of muddy puddles

It’s a mass of muddy puddles

We have an extremely busy week of work this week so won’t be able to tackle this next job until the weekend.

We plan to put the movable panels on the middle two strips where they can be overlapped. We will put permanent corrugated panels on the outer edges where the timbers stop them being able to overlap. This should stop water pouring in at the joins. We also intend putting strips of masking tape over the joins in the roof timbers where water is leaking in at the moment.

We will put left over off cuts from the panels round the outside top edge of the run to help water drain out instead of dripping in.

No matter how much work we put in on this run it’s seems that it is never finished. We are hopeful that this may just be the last improvements needed, for a while anyway.

Posted in Chickens | 2 Comments

Child gate solution

After the awful accident with Honey yesterday I wanted to safe guard against it ever happening again.

This morning she was her normal self and stuck her head through the gate just like yesterday (she hasn’t learned her lesson!). She was bouncy as ever, had no problem zooming in on some sunflower seeds and laid her egg even though she had laid yesterday. My husband also saw her jump up to one of the high perches so it seems having one eye partially closed hasn’t hampered her at all. I think her eye looks a little better but it will take time to get back to normal.

The bit that trapped Honey was the back end of the gate which is difficult for me to see. It’s a bit like when your toddler puts their fingers in the hinge side of the door and the older child shuts the door on them (well this happened with my children).

I mentioned to my husband that my friend Jackie has a child gate at her kitchen door as one of her girls got her leg shut in the door and he said that we have a redundant child gate and could do the same thing.

Off he went to fit the child gate inside of the run gate. What a brilliant solution. I have spent so long worrying about trapping them, being careful, telling them to get their heads out of the gate, and now finally the awful thing happened, but never again. I will have the peace of mind that this won’t be happening again.

Child proof gate from the outside

Child proof gate from the outside

Child proof gate from the inside

Child proof gate from the inside

Child gate shut while the main gate is open

Child gate shut while the main gate is open

The main gate doesn’t stay open on it’s own so I have wedged it open to show what it will look like as I enter the run. The bit that trapped Honey was the on the left hand side of the picture which is now completely blocked by the batons of wood. She will no longer be able to put her head through here when I open the gate.

It will take me a bit of getting used to going through two gates but I am happy that this sort of accident won’t be able to happen again. It could have been so much worse and now I have peace of mind that I don’t to have worry every time I go through the gate.

Posted in Chickens | 2 Comments

Fitting the roof panels

It has rained all night or at least every time I woke up (which I do frequently) I could hear it raining. It was raining hard when I went out to the girls first thing this morning and the run was a quagmire. I decided not to separate the girls today as there is so little dry area on the little girls side and also we will be working in the run getting the roof panels on.

We had bought all the materials yesterday so that we could make a start this morning. When we started it was still raining but by the time we had the first panels in the sun was out.

The first panels are in place

The first panels are in place

The beauty of these panels is that they can be closed during wet weather and opened up during dry or sunny weather. We intend to do four strips of panels to cover the width of the run. Each strip is made up of two panels which will overlap. The panels will cover half the length of the run extension which is where a beam crosses for them to be fixed to. We will leave the furthest half open and see how that goes. If it is still a problem with too much wet area we may install panels in this final bit too at a later date. For now our priority is extending the dry area.

All the panels are now in place

All the panels are now in place

It’s a shame we didn’t have time to get this done before the rain came as it will take a long time for the run to dry out but at least once it does it should stay dry. The forecast is for rain every day over the next week.

My husband  also wanted to take out the plastic cover that we have attached underneath the triangular bit of the run as he feels the constant water and wet leaves may rot the wood.  He wanted to put a new plastic sheet over the top of the run and had to get on top of the run to do this. He stapled the new plastic sheet over the top and also overlapped it over the new panels so that the bit that used to edge the veg plot will now stay dry. This is the area that we put a board over in winter because it was so muddy. This will solve that problem but the little girls area will still get wet where water runs down the panels but at least the next section in the new part will be dry.

I then set about cleaning the mud off the patio area from the morning’s work and cleaned all the water and feed bowls. Everything was looking clean again and my last job was to fork over the run under the new panels to help it dry out quicker.

Then I had a horrible disaster. When going in and out of the run gate the girls are always sticking their heads through the gate to see if there is anything tasty on the other side. I am so careful but this time I didn’t see Honey stick her head under the back end of the gate. I closed the gate against her head and she didn’t even make a sound. I was horrified and tried to get a look at her to see if there was any damage.

She wouldn’t let me get near her so I tried to tempt her with some corn. She was eating the corn and looked as bouncy as ever but I could see one eye was partly shut. I really wanted to pick her up and take a closer look but she kept evading me which wasn’t surprising.

At that moment my husband appeared to see how I was getting on. I tearfully told him what had happened and he said she didn’t seem to be bothered by it. I said I wanted to check the damage but couldn’t catch her. I made another attempt and managed to pick her up. I held her for us both to look at her eye. It was partly closed but my husband pointed out she was still blinking.

I wear contact lenses and just recently had a scratch on my eye. I had bought some optrex eye drops to treat it. We decided to drop some in Honey’s eye. My husband then gently felt her head and she made no sound or movement so it seems there is no other damage. Her eye is the most prominent part so I think it was just her eye that the gate pressed against. I felt so awful, guilty, heart sick and tearful but my husband said accidents happen and it’s probably the equivalent of us getting a black eye. He says it will be swollen and probably take a few days to get back to normal.

I put Honey down and then realised that she had pooped down me. Not surprising and I felt that I deserved that.

I forked over the run and the big girls and Honey were with me looking for worms and she seemed as bright as ever.

I managed to get a few photos of her.

Honey's good eye

Honey’s good eye

Honey's bad eye

Honey’s bad eye

While I was writing this my husband went to check on her and said she was having a dust bath with the big girls so although her eye is closed she is behaving as normal.

I feel so awful. We have made such progress today and finished the run improvements and then something awful like this happens. I keep tearing up over it. I really hope she is going to be okay.

Posted in Chickens | 8 Comments

Finishing touches to the run and the girls enjoy an afternoon together

Yesterday I decided to move one of the shrubs from the original part of the run to the new part of the run. There were several reasons for this move. The other shrub I put in the new part of the run has also not survived due to not having enough root but the good news is that the biggest most tree like one has survived. Where it is in it’s current position the space has now become crowded because of the addition of the little coop nest box and feeding station and finally the girls have realised they can stand on the little coop and strip more leaves from it.

The poor shrub only has leaves at the top and on one side

The poor shrub only has leaves at the top and on one side

The shrub is in it's new position

The shrub is in it’s new position

I also removed my very ugly protector from the rosemary to see if it will survive and the good news is that the girls don’t like it. They have had a token peck and rejected it as I think it’s too pungent for them.

The other thing we need to do is to get some cover over the new part of the run. We were going to put some plastic sheeting over it as a temporary measure but because we have just had a really hot sunny spell I changed my mind about that. I felt that the girls would be too hot and we really need panels that we can open in warm weather. We are having a really busy spell with work at the moment so decided to tackle this job over the bank holiday weekend and hoped the weather would hold out until then.

It didn’t! I got back at lunch time today to a heavy downpour. I realised that the little girls only had a very small dry area by the little coop which they were all huddled into. I felt that I must let them all out together as it wasn’t fair to have them confined to such a small area so I opened both dividing gates.

Honey has been desperate to join the big girls and constantly tries to slip through when I open the gate. The sad thing for me is that I know they are happier all together and they have more space that way too but I really need to stop the feather plucking and I think I am seeing the beginning of pin feathers on Amber’s head.

I could tell that Honey and Amber were really happy to be back with the big girls as where ever the big girls went they went too. Topaz and Sparkle haven’t yet developed that bond so are not bothered by being separated but do enjoy finding the perches on the other side of the run.

Honey and Amber love being able to hang out with the big girls

Honey and Amber love being able to hang out with the big girls

Topaz and Sparkle have discovered the ladder and the perch

Topaz and Sparkle have discovered the ladder and the perch

The good thing about the ladder is that Topaz has perched on many of the rungs so it gives a variety of perches.

The extra bricks we have taken out of the veg plot have been stacked on the path as we have no where to store them. My husband suggested I stack them in the run to give the girls something else to sit on as well as getting them out of the way and also they can be reclaimed if we ever need them.

I put half of them in the original run and half of them in the new part. The girls were interested in them right away and Honey and Amber were all over them. By the time I had finished and grabbed my camera it was Sparkle that was most interested.

The bricks soon attracted attention

The bricks soon attracted attention

The bricks on this side also stop the gate swinging back on to the rose

The bricks on the other side

I located them here because I didn’t want them to be any where the girls would land on them when jumping from perches or any where that would help them to reach more leaves from the shrubs. They also stop the gate swinging back onto the rose which is an added bonus.

I think the girls have had a lovely time together this afternoon and when we set to work on the roof panels they can be together again while we are there to make sure there is no plucking going on. This is all a bit of a trial and error plan but I hope we will get there in the end.

Posted in Chickens | 4 Comments

Amber’s egg

Yesterday afternoon Amber looked unwell again. She has been so much better recently but yesterday afternoon she looked really poorly again and I knew another egg was on the way.

I have been giving her daily limestone flour and cod liver oil in mash. I encouraged her to eat by dropping sunflower seeds in front of her which she did eat. At bedtime Amber is usually on the store cabinet with Sparkle but I expected to find her in the nest box with Topaz as this is where she usually goes when she feels unwell.

To my surprise Amber was stood on the top of the cabinet. As I got closer I realized that she was stood over her egg and must have just laid it. I picked it up and it was incredibly thin shelled. It was dented where the shell would move as it was touched.

Amber's egg

Amber’s egg

The other side of Amber's egg

The other side of Amber’s egg

I put the girls to bed and when I went in to them this morning Amber had as usual bounced back to normal again. It seems no matter what I give her she still has this problem with her eggs. It worries me that one day an egg will break as she is trying to lay it.

I know there is nothing more I can do to help her though and I just hope she can keep passing her eggs. Every time this happens I think I am going to lose her but yesterday my husband said that she would bounce back once her egg was laid and he was right. This morning you wouldn’t know she had a problem. I just hope to have her for as long as possible.

Posted in Chickens | 2 Comments