SLP 146 Start with Baby Chicks or Big Hens?

The Sustainable Living Podcast - Un podcast de Marianne West: sustainable living/homesteading/survival

Heat Tips and Getting Started with Chickens We are sharing tips on staying cool in a heat wave without air conditioning. Then, we dive into today's main topic: Getting started with keeping chickens. Is it better to start with already laying adult hens? Or day-old baby chicks. What about incubating eggs?   Patreon We love your support! Please visit our page and pledge as little as $1 to help create that world we all want to live in. Find us here: Website: http://www.sustainablelivingpodcast.com/  Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=2723500 Steemit: https://steemit.com/@sustainablelivin Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sustainablelivingpodcast/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sustainablelivingpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/MarianneEWest YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCA73SuaMBnBIaB5OdiL_y6Q   SLP 146 Start with Baby Chicks or Big Hens? We are starting the show with Listener Tips The questions: How to stay comfortable in a Heatwave without Airconditioning? Lorien Silverleaf Evaporative cooling; wet linen scarf.   Jacqueline Kim 1. A fan. 2. Cold showers to cool off. Cold showers take two minutes or so but make such a big difference. You have to jump into it. It is shocking at first (prepare to yelp), but delicious after. 3. Don't cook meals requiring more than one stove top fire at a time (so nothing that requires the oven coming on). We have been eating all manners of salads, gazpachos, and drinking a lot of ice cold infusions (of cut cucumber or oranges or mint). Sangrias too.   Britt Cool Yep, fans. Sit right in front of them   Lorien put a scarf on the fan!! It cools the air even more.   Sally Hovey Wet clothes and a fan   Karl Aldinger If you can spare some water, misting jets on fans drop temps in our greenhouse, for example.   Trevor Presley Outdoor shower   Darlene Sweetwood Swimming pool!   Emi Lio Staying in the shade   Tiny Farmer SD Plant a shade tree! it's at least 10 degrees cooler under our Chinese elm tree.   Starting with Chickens- Babies or Adult Hens? This episode is inspired by Nate who I met on the social media platform called steemit. You can find him here: https://steemit.com/@nateonsteemit We have big elm tree in our chicken yard. We cut in winter in a process called pollarding and let it grow in summer to provide shade for the chickens. Getting chickens - babies or adults?   I am not expert - but I have taken courses from the University of Edinburgh   https://www.coursera.org/learn/chickens   It is part of their MOOC. Massive open online courses   A new one opens August 20th, 2018 and I highly recommend it!   Meat and egg chicks   Heritage chicken - dual breeds   Courses by Patricia Foreman- Author of city chicks Chicken and You courses www.chickensandyou.com/.   Backyard Chicken Keeper Certification Course   I will post a video of my chicken set up - don't expect perfection   Beware of experts that are new to the subject - a tip by Joel Salatin who was on our podcast.   Adult or babies?   It all depends Adult chickens Benefits: Eggs right away Less sensitive Less work in raising pullets You know that you get a hen Possible problems:   Longer possible exposure to disease Don’t know how old exactly Don’t know what they ate - possible GMO and antibiotics More expensive to acquire Possible free ways to get: Backyard chicken folks that are tired of chicken Egg farm that typically culls chicken when about 1 year laying. Baby Chicks   Advantages:   So cute!!!!! Less exposure to possible diseases Can be handled frequently and became very tame Know what they are being fed They are so cute - chicken therapy Less expensive to buy - start-up costs More varieties available   Choices: From hatchery - direct, but will be shipped - stress (3 days without food) From a Feed store - more exposure to possible diseases, more stress - shipping, lots of chicks, then transport home. Disadvantages:   More work - but they are so cute!!! They are sensitive - might die It takes 6 to 8 month to get the first egg Might be lots of males   Hatching your own:   Need equipment - can be borrowed Needs care and attention for the 3 weeks Needs a space for the hatcher   Watching a baby chick hatch is an amazing experience and a great teaching moment for kids.   You will get at least half of the hatch as little boys. They are cute in the beginning but turn into loud and obnoxious teenagers before you know it. You need a plan what to do with them.   Set up for babies:   You need to keep them warm - mostly free of drafts. They grow fast and need more and more space. Aspen bedding is recommended - not pine shavings or newspaper. Better to have bottom heat than heat lamps. Lamps can fall and cause fires. Also - light all night long. Learn chicken language   Best: Mommy gets broody and does all the work :)   Question and comments? Visit us at any of the social media sites. we are most active on Steemit.

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