UCP Episode 061: Should you get Fall/Winter Chicks? A Discussion with Tyler Danke of Purely Poultry

Chicks In A Box

Springtime is the season most usually associated with getting started with baby chicks. However, autumn (and even winter) can be viable seasons for you to get a jump start on next year’s flock.  There are a few marked advantages to getting fall chicks instead of waiting for springtime.

Tyler Danke, owner and operator of Purely Poultry joins me on the Urban Chicken Podcast this week to share his insight on fall/winter chicks.

Continue reading

photo by:

UCP Blog 026: Pasty Butt & Baby Chicks

New Chick - photo by Nikol Lohr

New Chick – photo by Nikol Lohr

Continuing on our springtime chicks’ ailment series, this week we discuss the common issue of “Pasty Butt.”  The condition “Pasty Butt” occurs when feces get stuck and harden around the chick’s down surrounding the bird’s vent.  The hardened feces can literally “paste” over the chick’s vent and block the excretion of feces.  If not removed, this condition will kill the affected chick and rather quickly. Continue reading

UCP Guest Post 002: My New Zealand Urban Chickens – Mindy has Babies! – by Fiona Campbell

Mindy and her Chicks (circa 1980) - photo courtesy of Fiona Campbell

Mindy and her Chicks (circa 1980) – photo courtesy of Fiona Campbell

Today’s Post is provided by UCP guest blogger, Fiona Campbell, an avid backyard chicken keeper living in rural Kapiti, New Zealand on fiveFiona Campbellacres. Fiona is the author and illustrator of the book, “Ruby’s Diary,” which is a chicken memoir penned from the point of view of her top hen, Ruby.  The book cleverly considers what is important in life (which is remarkably the similar whether that be a human or chicken life).  You can join Fiona at her blog Ruby’s Diary, where Fiona’s pet hen Ruby waxes lyrically about life and happenings in her flock.  Fiona’s book, “Ruby’s Diary” is also available on her blog website, Ruby’s Diary Hen (LINK).  

_________________________________________________________________________

My pet chicken Mindy was a complete unit. In and of herself she was perfect. Her urban backyard and our family house were her domain. She lived solely focused on the here and now and wanted for nothing. I on the other hand, being eight years old, wanted baby chicks!

I grew up watching David Attenborough’s BBC Nature documentaries and consequently knew what was required when it came to getting chicks. As Mindy was mateless, I knew she needed help to achieve ‘her’ dream of becoming a mother. Taking on a rooster seemed much too challenging, so Mum and Dad suggested fertilized eggs instead. Continue reading

UCP Blog 021: Chickens May Not Have Teeth, but They Are All Born with a Tooth

Newly Hatch Olive Egger with Egg Tooth Still Attached - photo by Jen Pitino

Newly Hatch Olive Egger with Egg Tooth Still Attached – photo by Jen Pitino

The ability for birds to develop teeth was lost approximately 70-80 Million years ago.  Yet all birds are born with what is called an “egg tooth.”  Though called a tooth the egg tooth is actually a horny protrusion of harden skin found at the tip of the chick’s beak.  The egg tooth is shaped in a point and is an essential part of the gestation process. Continue reading

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...