Wednesday, November 2, 2022

Chicks moved into the Outdoor Coop

 The chicks that hatched on Oct 6 have been moved into a chick coop inside the outdoor coop. Period 7 students moved the chicks into their new home on Tuesday, Nov 1 during period 7.






Saturday, October 22, 2022

Chicken Update Q1 2023

 In the first quarter of the school year, we sold 14 hens and gave two away. This was done in an effort to reduce the size of the flock. On the opposite to this, we had two hatches in Q1. On August 25 we had 10 eggs hatch and on Oct 6 we had 7 hatches.

We had 10 eggs hatch the first week of school on Aug 25th. These chicks were moved out to the Hen coop in late September to make room for another hatching of chicks planned for early October.

In the month of September, we had a two-week stretch of our weather hitting 95 degrees. During that time chicken egg production went from around 22 eggs a day to 4 or 5 a day. Happy to say we are back to around 17 eggs a day.



Wednesday, May 11, 2022

Way Behind Update: Foothill Knolls and Upland JR. High

 Chicken Update:

On April 22, 2022, we had Foothill knolls join us for a farm tour. We had anticipated their arrival by having 7 chicks hatched. Unfortunately, the chickens did not hatch until later in the day. 












Also on March 30th, the HHS Farm attended an event at Upland Jr High School.  Students from the farm class participated in the event and displayed some of our newest chick's hatches. We had 10 chicks hatch on March 30th in the AM.

Saturday, February 19, 2022

Q3 Week 4 Feb 14-18 Update

 This week the egg-laying is continuing for the second week in a row. Today we had a day high of 29 eggs!  The photo of the week was the chick just hanging around. On Saturday, Feb 20 I opened the doors of the chicks so they are now part of the flock. It appears of the 14 chicks 4 are roos. In the photo, the white chick is definitely a roo!




This Egg weighed in at 87 Grams


Monday, February 14, 2022

The Hens are Laying!

 In late January the hens began laying double digits in eggs per day. The last time we had double digits in egg-laying per day was late October. This week was like the old days, every day was over 10 eggs laid in one day!

Sunday, January 30, 2022

Four Chicks Hatched

Four chicks hatched yesterday Saturday Jan 29, a day late.  On Friday Nov 20 power to the school had gone out due to the wind event. I do not know how long it was out and feared we may have lost all of the eggs in the incubator. 

 

PHOTO

 

The four chicks that hatched all have feathered legs. Two came from Dark Brown Eggs, and two came from Dark Olive Eggs.

 

PHOTO

Saturday, January 22, 2022

Feeding Area Isolated in Coop

 With the addition of two Potbelly pigs the feed boxes had to be moved to keep the pigs out. Today with the help of students we built an enclosure around the boxes.


 





Chickens enjoying the Sun after Last Nighsts Wind Event

 


Saturday, January 8, 2022

Sexing Bearded Breeds

 

SEXING BEARDED BREEDS LIKE AMERICANAS AND EASTER EGGERS

Breeds with fluffy, bearded faces like Easter Eggers are sometimes wing sexable at hatch. If they were not wing sexed, their fluffy faces make seeing developing wattles almost impossible. Luckily their pea combs can be of some help. 3-week old males will have wider combs with 3 rows of ‘bumps’ visible, the center row being the largest. The rhyme “Three in a row? That bird will crow!” can help you remember that three visible rows of ‘peas’ on a chick’s pea comb likely means male. The young cockerel’s comb will be the watery pink color of light rosé wine. Their feet will be larger and wider, with leg and ankle bones that are visually thicker than a female’s.

This 3.5 week old Easter Egger chick has 3 rows of “peas” or bumps on his comb, which is already showing a blush of pink. He is clearly male. The two outer rows are smaller but quite visible. A female would only have a small center row with smooth sides – no additional rows of peas would be visible.

Americana and Easter Egger cockerels will often develop rust-colored patches on their shoulders around 6 weeks old. Tail feathers will begin to have tips that arch or curve downward around 5 weeks old. Iridescent blue or green colors that develop during month 2 in their pointy ended, arching tail feathers is one of the most obvious clues that the chick is a cockerel.

How to Identify Male & Female Chicks
This 5-month-old Americana rooster illustrates multiple male attributes.

Sexing Chicks 5 Weeks Old

 

SEXING CHICKS 5+ WEEKS OLD

By 5 weeks old the wattles are reddening and becoming pendulous. Cockerel’s combs will also begin to grow taller, larger and more blush colored than female hatch mates, whose combs remain a nude champagne color.

Sexing Chicks 3 Weeks Old

SEXING CHICKS 3 WEEKS OLD

At 3 weeks old cockerel chicks suddenly have the skin under their chins flush a popsicle pink color where they will begin to develop wattles. Even just a little tiny bit of barely-there hint of a flush of pink is a cockerel. Any shade of pink in the wattles of a 3 week old is a male. Females have wattles the same translucent nude color as this chick’s beak.

 

Sexing Chicks Week Old

 

SEXING WEEK-OLD CHICKS

When you go to buy chicks, oftentimes they are already 3 to 7 days old. In many breeds the pullets feather out slightly faster than cockerels, giving you a way to perhaps visually sex the chicks.

Females tend to develop tail feathers much more quickly than males for the first two weeks. Similarly, females have wing feathers that have grown slightly faster – and appear longer – than male chicks of the same age.

Males will often still have fluff nub tails at 7 days old where pullets will have visible tail feathers developing.

The 7 days old female on the right has begun developing visible tail feathers while the male on the left has not. Notice her wing feathers are also longer.

Please note that pullets will only feather out faster for the first couple of weeks. Around 15 days old male and female chicks will have similar-looking wings and tails.

Sexing Chicks 12 - 24 hours Old

 

WING SEXING

Wing sexing can be attempted on many breeds and hybrids. Wing sexing takes such a picky eye that most people find it difficult and give up. Slow-growing dual-purpose breeds are often the hardest to wing sex. Some males will feather quickly and some females will feather slowly, which adds further confusion. It has been my experience that in every hatch around 1/3 of females will hatch with extra-long pin feathers and will, indeed, be female. The rest of the hatch is kind of an educated guess.

Let me begin by saying this is not an easy skill to learn from pictures on a blog. It takes practice. Also helpful is a very picky eye because you are going to be looking for differences measured in mere millimeters.

BEST DONE AT 12-24 HOURS OLD

This also only works on chicks that are 48 hours old or less. By 3 days old most chicks will wing sex as “female”. I have found wing sexing is best done between 12 and 24 hours of hatching when the pin feathers on the tip of the chick’s wings are clearly visible but have not started feathering out, which has begun by day 3. Wing sexing is believed to be up to 85% accurate and mistakes can be made, especially when sexing dual purpose breeds.

Wing sexing is possible because female chicks grow feathers slightly faster than male chicks for the first week or two. Looking at the wingtip of a 12-hour old female chick will reveal very long pin feathers with shorter pin feathers in between each long one in a long-short-long-short pattern. It is the long pin feathers – not just the patterning – that identify a female. To see the pin feathers, you must gently hold the downy fluff on the wing tip out of the way. A female’s pin feathers will likely be easy to view.

HOW FEMALE WING FEATHERS LOOK AT 12 HOURS OLD:
Wing sex female chick
The female’s pin feathers are so long you can easily see them. The pins make a very obvious long-short pattern.
Wing sexing pullet chick
The downy fluff barely needs to be moved out of the way to see the long pin feathers on a female.
How to Identify Male & Female Chicks
Long pin feathers and clear patterning are still obvious in solid-colored chicks.

Males have shorter pin feathers overall. You will try to move them down out of the way to view the pin feathers and feel like you can’t hardly see them at all. These quite short, hard-to-individually-view pin feathers are indicative of a male. You’ll also notice all the pins seem to be the same stubby length and the shorter pins are difficult to see.

HOW MALE WING FEATHERS LOOK AT 12 HOURS OLD:
Wing sex male chick
If the pin feathers are so short you can barely get the fluff out of the way to see them, the chick is likely male.

When wing sexing recently hatched chicks, I find it easiest to locate a very obvious female. Closely observing her pin feather patterning helps me start to identify the subtle differences between males and females. If you’re having a hard time, you probably need to wait until the chicks are 12 to 18 hours old when the pin feathers have grown a little more. Wing sexing just-hatched chicks that are not fully dry is extremely difficult.

LEG COLOR SEXING

Leg color sexing is the least reliable sexing method and is folk wisdom, not a true technique.

The saying goes that a chick with darker legs and “smearing” that goes all the way down the leg through the center toe is a female.

Image Source: HooversHatchery.com

In the above image from Hoover’s Hatchery, the female on the left has darker black legs with color that goes all the way down her center toes. The male on the right happens to have smearing through his center toe but his upper legs are lighter and mottled. Since these are a sex-linked hybrid, which means the males are a different color, the male is identified by the yellow spot on his head and not his leg color.

This tip does not work on most breeds, nor on breeds with solid white or yellow-colored legs. I mention it only as an anecdotal way of perhaps increasing your chance of selecting a female from a bin of barnyard mix chicks.

Know Basic Poultry Terminology

 

KNOW BASIC POULTRY TERMINOLOGY 


Newly hatched baby chickens are called chicks. They are typically less than 6 weeks old.

Chicks that are fully feathered – around 2 months old – are often called juveniles.

Young female chickens who are not yet old enough to lay eggs are called pullets.

Young male chickens who are not yet old enough to crow or mate hens are called cockerels.

Female chickens who are around 6 months old and have just begun laying their first eggs, which start off small and increase in size over the first month of laying, are called point-of-lay pullets or point-of-lay hens.

Adult female chickens who are laying full-size eggs are called laying hens. When buying a hen the seller should disclose their age.

Hens that are over 2 years old will experience a slow-down in her egg laying, giving only 3-4 eggs per week but still consuming as much feed as a young hen laying 5-7 eggs per week.

Hens that are 3+ years old may be laying very few to zero eggs per week. Do not buy hens 3 years old or older!

Farm Class Update -Wheel barrows of earth moved into the coop!

This week the farm classes spent time bringing the floor in the coop back up to grade. It became apparent that over the past few years while raking chicken poop that the floor in the coop was being lowered.  This week we placed about 12 wheelbarrows full of dirt and sand into the coop. The students also made a latch for the double door into the outdoor farm area.

New Chicks Hatch! Jan 4 Chicks Hatch!

 Beginning around 3 PM on Monday eggs began to hatch. By the end of Tuesday, we had eight hatches, and by the end of Wednesday, we had 14 new chicks! This hatching of chicks would be beset called a snapshot of the farm. All the different colors of eggs that were being hatched in December were selected.

We are calling these chicks the Jan 4th chicks

Monday, January 3, 2022

2nd Gen Hen Laying some Beautiful Eggs!

 A BCM hen is laying a dark olive egg. It is stunning. I have begun collecting her eggs after verifying that they are fertile and will hatch some. The hen is a hatchling from the Nov 2020 BCM group I picked up at Magic Mountain.




New to Farm....Potbelly Pigs

 The farm received two potbelly pigs on December 1, 2021. The pigs were donated by a former student. They are a hit with the students. They both have their own personalities. The black pig loves to have his belly rub, where he will fall onto his side while you continue to rub!



It Rained over The Holiday Break!

 The area received about 5 - 6 inches of rain, unfortunately, the water runoff runs right through the coop.



Way Behind in my Posts

 We had a batch of 9 chicks hatch on December 2nd. The chicks were in room 14 until December 28, where they were moved out into the chicken coop. They were placed in a private cage with two heating lamps and two adult hens that were in need of some care. 

The chicks. Two were sold around December 15 to our new math teacher. One chick died in room 13 prior to being moved out into the coop. A second died in the coop. I noticed it sitting by itself under a heat lamp. I could not see anything that looked out of the ordinary, other than it was by itself. The other five chicks look fine.