Author: Anna & Mark

Predator problems with chicks on pasture

Turken chickThis spring and summer have
been all about figuring out how to grow our own chicks.  Although
I’ve focused my posts on getting my
hatch
rate
up, we’ve had
another big problem — keeping those chicks alive for the first two
months.




We put our first set of
17 chicks out in a special section of the chicken coop soon after they
hatched…and we promptly lost four chicks to what I assume was a
rat.  (One chick body was left behind, which is typical of a rat
kill.)




For hatch 2, I kept the
chicks inside for a full three weeks (which just about drove me
batty.)  During that time period, we lost one chick to a power
outage — in the future, we’ll always have some backup power on
hand.  Then, after moving the chicks to the coop, two more were
picked off by some sort of predator.




All told, we’ve lost a
full 23% of the chicks from the first two hatches to predators. 
Not only is it heartbreaking, lost chicks hit you in the wallet since
you’ve paid for the chicks
Mother hen with chicksor eggs and the feed to raise
them.  One solution would be to seriously predator-proof the coop,
but we like to have our chicks out on pasture as soon as they’ll go
(around a week or two old), and you can’t keep small predators like
rats out of an entire pasture.




The best solution I’ve
come up with is to continue to work toward the plan I’ve had all along
— use broody hens to raise our chicks.  When our third set of
chicks hatched, our broody hen had finally settled onto a nest of eggs
and
we
were able to slip the chicks underneath her one night
.  One chick seems to
have been lost in the process, but since then the mother hen has been
making sure that absolutely nothing gets close to her ten little
fuzzballs.  It’s too soon to be sure that she’ll be able to beat
my 23% failure rate, but I suspect predator protection will be one more
advantage
of a broody hen
.


Our chicken waterer works for chicks from day 1.

Revised chicken tractor wheel lift

Chicken tractor wheel lift

About a week after
sending me his plans for a
chicken
tractor wheel lift
,
Duncan emailed this addendum:



Had
a little problem this morning when I moved the girls.

One of the 4 x 4 wood blocks where the wheel lift assy was attached to
the chicken tractor gave way. It was screwed and glued. (lot of torque
force on this part)

So back to the drawing board as they say. LOL!

Here is an updated “as built” drawing of what I did to fix the problem
and maybe a little better drawing of the assy as well.

I put two – 6″ x 1/2″ bolts and nuts on each side as shown in the
drawing. Confident now it will play nice.



The revised plans look
even better.  I hope some of you put them to use!



Our chicken waterer is perfect for chicken
tractors since it never spills on uneven terrain.

Chicken bucket waterer mount

Homemade bucket waterer mountA lot of our customers turn
their DIY kits into a
bucket waterer, and I can’t blame
them.  Once we moved our birds out of tractors and weight was no
longer an issue, I fell in love with the supreme simplicity of a clean
water dispenser that hydrates our flock for nearly a month without
refilling. 




The one problem with
bucket waterers is finding a way to hold up such a heavy object. 
We’ve showcased some good
mounting methods in the past, but I have two
new ones to share.  First, Jeremy emailed me the photos to the
left and below, explaining that the lip of the bucket sits on his
homemade wooden brackets, which are in turn screwed into a wooden
rail.  He wrote:



Not
sure how durable it will be for the long haul, but we wanted something
that we could easily raise up as the chickens get bigger. Chicken bucket watererI’ll just unscrew the brackets
and mount them higher up the 2 x 4 rails next time.



Meanwhile, since I’ve
had Mark move our own bucket waterer every time we rotate chickens to a
new pasture, he’s been streamlining his mounting method.  His
newest mount, shown below, is simply “2 shelf brackets, a piece of
scrap lumber, and some rope with a bungee cord tied on the end”.

Bucket waterer holder


If these ideas get your creative juices flowing, I hope you’ll take the
time to email me your
own photos and mounting ideas!