Friday, February 28, 2014

Chicken Butt


Chicken Butt

We had a scare yesterday when we checked on our baby chicks. Our super healthy little girls suddenly had poopy butts. From our preparation research we knew to soak the butt with hot water using a rag or cotton ball. We quickly realized it was a difficult task to soak their rump without getting the whole baby chicken soaked and we were worried about dropping their temperature too low. After a few tries we found that hot water and a rag would do the trick and getting a good hold on the chick would keep it from squirming and getting wet. We patiently soaked the plug and cleaned the area and then placed them back under their light to dry off. Next step – research how to prevent this from happening again!
We found that plugged butts are normal with baby chicks for many reasons. Sometimes it is just the stress of being shipped. It can be caused by being hatched in an incubator or being kept too hot. It could be too little grit in their food. Because it is so common, it is really important to keep an eye on those chicken butts and help unplug them when need be. Apparently baby chicks eat their mother hen’s droppings and the good bacteria helps with digestion. A way to supplement the chicks and help prevent it from happening again is to give them the yolk of a hardboiled egg. At first I was shocked but it does make sense. In the egg they lived off the yolk.
So moving forward we added more grit to their food. The grit will help grind up the food in their bellies. We gave them crumbled yolk from a hardboiled egg and we put olive oil on their rumps to help keep that area from getting gunked up. We will do chicken butt checks twice a day and hope our girls get through this!

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Special Delivery

Hatch Date passed

2/24, the chicks' hatch date has passed. Our newborn chicks are alive and on the way. eFowl is shipping them with 2-3 day USPS Poultry shipping which is usually comes in 1-2 days. 

Here they are!

I got a call around 2pm from the local post office that there was "Some Live Poultry" waiting to be picked up. I hurried down to pick them up and the teller seemed almost as excited as I was. They came in a surprisingly small box, to keep them warm I assume. They would chirp like mad any time they were still. I could barely seem them through the breathing holes but I hurried home to take them out and get them set up in their new home.

I put them into their brooding area and they flocked out of the box and hid in the corner.

Calming down

After an hour or so they started to relax. I copied what I saw in a couple Youtube videos that suggested taking each chick and forcing them to eat and drink so they know where to eat. Although I'm not sure how essential it is I decided to go ahead and do it after they calmed down. After the first couple they all started to eat and drink on their own. They quickly follow eachother and have a true hive mind in their actions. They decide, "It's eating time, now!" or "It's time to hide in the corner." and they all follow.


Friday, February 21, 2014

Setting up the brooding area

More supplies

Not knowing what all we needed we stopped by a feed store nearby. They were very ready with all the answers and supplies at the front of the store. The associate there helped us to get the rest of the supplies including:
  • Red Heat lamp
  • Thermometer
  • Chick boost - Sugar+Supplements for their water
  • Chick starter - Grit for grinding down food
  • 2x Liter feeders
  • 1x Gallon waterer
  • 10 sq ft wood shavings

Setting up

Once we got home we planned out the area and started setting up.
We layed a tarp down in an under-bed drawer area and filled it with the wood shavings
We filled water/chick starter mixture and made sure it would get room temperature.
We put a heater in the room to make sure we could part of the brooder to the required 90 degrees (and it did). Filled the feeders with 50/50 chick starter/feed.

We brought in cardboard that we will later use to make the walls of the brooder higher as it's only about 5-6" and less than that with the wood shavings.

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Ordering/Picking

Choosing our chicks

While choosing what breeds of chickens we wanted we were looking mainly for the egg production. We ended up going with the Easter Egger, Brown Leghorn, and Buff Orpington. This would give us Brown, White, and Green/Blue eggs. We had decided on having around 8 chicks and no roosters but needed to order 5 chicks per breed.


Ordering our chicks

Ordering our chicks was easy enough. We decided to go with eFowl.com. Their website was nice and professional and everything was informative and easy to navigate and learn about each breed. We bought the chicks and also chick starter feed.

The hatch date is set for 2/24 and we are awaiting: