Tuesday, October 25, 2011

King George stays home!


Another poultry show - my second, at Stevenson, Washington. This is the first time I have been able to go in the fall, because they moved the date up from November to October. In November there is usually black ice or snow or some other weather problem in the coast range that I have to drive through to get to Stevenson. I don't drive in hazardous conditions anymore. I just stay home.


The problem with October though, is that the chickens, not just mine but most, were molting, and so the chickens that I had picked out to put in the show were in no condition to go

.

The one beautiful hen that I thought I would enter appeared in the yard about two weeks before the show with a baby chick. That was a surprise. I thought I might separate her from the chick in time for the show but she screamed so hard when I tried to remove her from the cage that you would think I was torturing her by pulling off her appendages, so I gave up. To this day both she and her chick have labeled me as THE ENEMY. So she stayed home. I picked out a superb rooster, but he was crazy afraid of me when I brought him in and put him in a cage, also he was heavy, or 19.2 ounces, which is the maximum weight. But I thought I could tame him down and maybe bring his weight down. But that didn't happen. So I thought I would bring Bug, my little golden rooster, who is semi-tame but then I remembered he was too small and didn't weigh enough. The bottom weight for acceptance is 12.8 for a rooster. So again, about three days before the show I went out in the yard and found a small black and red young rooster and I thought I would take him. He was remarkably tame. But he was still in the process of growing out new neck feathers. And I also took Honey, my hen that was tame, for the Table Top contest because I knew she would not fly away. I also picked up a hen from the yard after deciding she might just be the right shape. She was in the right weight range. I did not have any great expectations.


At this show was a real Serama judge, and TableTop Judging. Most of us Serama owners were not familiar with the judging process for our chickens and it was a real learning experience. It was also fun. There were a lot of beautiful Serama there.


The cage judging is for ABA. The judge looks at all the chickens in the cages and if they come in from first to fifth, he writes the number on the card attached to their cages. White earlobes mean disqualification, as do over or under weights, green legs. wry tails, and etc. you can check with your ABA book. Some things like wrinkled ear lobes or squirrel tail are defects but not disqualification. I thought white earlobes meant the white enamel ones on some chickens but it only means a little or a lot of white on a red earlobe. So my rooster and my hen Honey were disqualified right away! Surprise! But the other hen received a mark of 4, which I thought was very good since there were so many chickens there and lots that didn't get any number at all.


For Table Top judging the only disqualification is over or under weight. So that meant I could put Honey in as I had planned. Table Top Judging is where the judge sits at a table with a little piece of carpet in front of him. You come up to the table with your chicken and when the judge is ready you toss your chicken in the air just a little bit so she has to flap her wings twice before she lands on the table. Usually this puts the chicken on alert and it can show its form better.

To qualify for the finals your chicken has to earn 70 or more points. I decided not to enter Honey and entered the other hen that came in fourth in ABA. She earned a 71 in TableTop and qualified for the finals but did not make it to the top in the finals.


So I have to say it was really worth going, I learned a lot, talked to a lot of people, sold a few chickens, traded one for two. I enjoyed myself and was glad I went.



Tuesday, September 13, 2011



The last time I posted was after the April show. Now its time for the fall show on October 15-16! What happened in between then and now? We went from heavy solid rain, which lasted to the end of June, to the hottest and most sunny summer I have experienced since moving here. And I was busy all the time hatching chicks. I had a very poor hatch this year! Lots of non-fertile and dead-in-shell.

I always take about 24 eggs from the "yard" to put in my incubators. I may not know who the hens are but I am sure of the rooster since there is just one "yard rooster" at a time in the yard. There are cockerels in the yard also, but they generally aren't ready to breed at this time.

Then I put breeding pairs together to try and get certain traits that I want to see.

From the "Yard" I hatched the best rooster that I have had yet, and I also hatched a black cockerel that looks just like his father. It takes a while for chickens to show their type, and in the beginning I didn't think this black rooster was very good but as he grew he got a lot better. I sold him wondering if I was making a mistake or not. Anyway the wheaten cockerel pictured here is the new cock on the block. He has really good type but he is very wild. I was thinking of taking him to the show but I don't think he will be calm enough by that time. This is an ongoing problem. I need to make sure that all chicks go through a taming process before they are placed in the yard. Usually they go from the "baby brooder" in my computer room, to the bigger brooder cage in my kitchen, and then to the yard where they are placed in a cage in the hutch with a heater. That way they can be introduced to the other chickens with out being bullied and in about three weeks I move them out of this cage directly into the hutch and yard.

I really don't put any time into training and posing my chickens. I am totally lax in that area and need to do better.

The hen I am going to take to the show is "Honey". She is not spectacular but a good type, and also very tame. How did she get that way? I don't know!!

Sunday, May 1, 2011

At The Poultry Show






May 1st

It has been raining pretty steadily up until two days ago. Thursday the 28th of April , the heavy rain turned to snow and the temperature dropped to 34 degrees. The snow coated the trees and looked very pretty for a winter scene. I did make it to the Pacific Northwest Poultry show in Stevenson Washington though. It was held April 16th and 17th.

I entered two pullets, Black Betty and Blondie, 11.6 and 10 ounces respectively. I knew that they were not perfect but I thought I should just go ahead and enter my birds to get experience and maybe some feedback. It turns out that they won first and second place in their class of Serama pullets, although there wasn't much competition. And no tabletop judging either. I was definitely not ready for that.

I really enjoyed the show. I love looking at all types of poultry and there were about a thousand birds entered there.

So now I am ready to make more pretty birds. I haven't really produced a show quality rooster yet so that would be nice if that happens.

The sun shone last Friday and Saturday with a minimum of rain. Halleluia!!

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Home Sweet Home



Winter - Oh! My! Here in Nehalem we get all kinds of weather - very changeable. High winds, heavy rains, flooding, and sometime nice warm weather and sometimes record cold spells.

A few weeks ago we had such heavy rains that there was flooding in several towns, and my chicken yard for my laying hens was three inches under water. I have never seen this before. The chickens were walking around in the water looking very puzzled, they would put their heads down to peck at something and then stop and go nnnnnnhhh. I should have taken a picture but I was sort of in shock. I opened the gate to the banty yard which was on higher ground and they made their way into this and spent the day with their smaller cousins. I hope this doesn't happen again, the water was up to the floor of their chicken house.

I feel really good about the Bantam hutch though. Twelve feet long and five feet high and raised about three and a half feet above the ground, the legs buried about three feet into the dirt. No high winds will blow this away, nor floods reach the floor. And the heated roost, plus heated water and food inside, plus a heat emitting lamp - no light produced - in case of freezing weather, makes me feel good knowing my small birds are really secure.

The bantams have a home sweet home

Friday, January 21, 2011

NO COLD CHICKENS HERE!



I am glad I built a heated roost for my chickens. We have had some temperatures in the high twenties and it is good to know that my chickens aren't stressed trying to keep warm at night. They appear very chipper in the cold mornings as if the cold doesn't bother them at all.


My heated roost is the length of my giant chicken hutch. The roost is a12 foot long 2x4. I wrapped a twenty three foot reptile heating cable around the 2x4, spacing between wires was about three and a half inches. I secured this into place and covered with a strip of space blanket to cover the 2x4, stapled this on, taking care not to puncture the heating cable and then covered with an inexpensive strip of indoor outdoor carpet, and stapled this on also. My little chickens can rest upon this roost and do- all lined up in a row.


I also have a ceramic heat source for the pigeon waterer I use inside the hutch, and that works also - no freezing.


If the temperature goes into the low twenties or lower, I have a 150 watt heat emitter hanging inside the hutch to add a little more heat.


You have to be careful with those heat lamps, emitters or heaters. I read that several fires had been started in urban coops because of heat lamps.


The reason I like heat emitters is that they don't emit light, and that makes things more natural. They are also supposed to be safer. I was using one inside a metal tub of chicks, suspended on a bar inside the tub. I had been using it for months. The emitter was screwed into a porcelain socket with metal dome. I use wood shavings in the tub as bedding for the chicks. One day I opened the door to the shop where I keep my chicks and the place was full of smoke, it was so thick I could hardly see. Uh Oh! I thought, where is this coming from? when I went over to open a window I saw it was boiling out one of the tubs. I quickly disconnected it, opened all the rest of the windows and door including all the overhead doors to the garage. It took awhile for things to air out. I found that the porcelain part had fallen out of the metal dome and onto the shavings. The metal dome was still suspended in place. The emitter in the porcelain socket came to rest on the shavings. The shavings were charcoal black and some were glowing.


The good news is that the chicks were fine - I don't see how - but they were and are. If I had not been home and gone out to the shop when I did, I think it would have been another story.