The Circle Z

Friday, July 28, 2006 - Mystery at Circle Z

Posted in Chickens
We spent a day at the fair last week. When we came back, there was an extraneous guinea perched on our backyard fence. It fit in with our other four guineas right away, even though it was obviously older than ours. There was the initial new-kid-on-the-block pecking, but they settled down rather quickly. How do you all of a sudden acquire a guinea without even trying? As far as I know, we have no neighbors with guineas (at least we have never heard them).

That night we found, upon counting the chickens when it was time to pen them up for the night, one plymouth rock hen missing. This is highly unusual as the hens are creatures of habit, and they always get in their pen for the night. Especially when tempted by that tasty treat known as scratch grains. We feared that someone's dog had misappropriated our hen, and the neighbor, not wanting to admit his dog's crime, simply left a guinea to replace the hen.

But ah, the plot thickens. Two days later in the morning at "breakfast", here comes little Miss Missing Hen. We have no roosters, but is it possible that this hen is brooding somewhere unbeknownst to us? Thinking (mistakably) that she will soon have a passel of chicks? Since this bird's reappearance, she has disappeared and reappeared several more times. We try to watch at feeding time to see where she is coming from, but haven't been able to catch her yet.

Where is our hen carousing? Where did that guinea come from? Caring for free-range poultry is never boring.


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Wednesday, August 2, 2006 - If you find she has 'stolen a nest'

Posted by jackiebridgen
Take a tip from us - immediately she settles thereon, purchase some day old chicks (we were surprised to find, that hens cannot count the requisite 21 days, and show no surprise if their eggs 'hatch' too soon!) and under cover of night, replace eggs with fluff balls. Our banty hen has been raising two broods a year like this for years - she is also unsurprised that her 'young' are very much bigger than her by about 6 weeks!
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I'm a midwestern gal, living my dream life on 7 acres in the country. I love Jesus, my husband, three children, Daisy the Wonder Goat, and our chickens. I'd still love to someday have a miniature jersey milk cow.

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