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The Chocolate Orpington

| Poultry Blogs Network | May 2, 2010

chocolate-orpington-bantam-cockerel-matt-hansonThe Chocolate Orpington is a relatively new colour of Orpington and currently to my knowledge only exists in bantam size although I’m sure it won’t be long before they are crossed into large fowl. The choc gene responsible for the chocolate colour was discovered by the late Dr. Clive Carefoot around 1993-1994. It is a rare Sex-Linked Recessive gene that is basically a dilution of black pigment. This means that out of a pair of genes, the female will be chocolate with just one copy of the gene but the male requires two copies of the choc gene to look chocolate. This also means that black males can look black, but be carrying the chocolate gene.

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A Cheap Chicken or Duck House

| Poultry Blogs Network | March 12, 2010

cheap-chicken-houseThe ‘cheap’ Chicken or Duck house costs about €25 to build, yet they are the most sturdy, well insulated houses I have! Normally my advice to people looking to buy a chicken house is not to buy too cheap since they will end up either having the fox get in to it, or after a few years will be buying again but building this chicken or duck house, if you pardon the pun, goes against the grain. You must be thinking by now that this all seems too good to be true, but there is one key ingredient to this house that keeps the cost down, and that is, the frame underneath it which is a surplus wooden packing crate.

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New Chick Box Plastic Nestboxes

| Poultry Blogs Network | February 16, 2010

Chick-BoxChick Box is a new plastic nesting box that looks promising in the fight against Red Mite. BEC, the makers of Chick Box have sent us this information about it:

A new all plastic poultry nesting box called the Chick Box is set to dramatically improve the way thousands of keepers can care for their birds. The Chick Box, from BEC, takes just seconds to clean, ending hours of work for poultry keepers struggling to keep boxes free from harmful red mite and other pests and bacteria.

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Lucy Courtney meets up with Derrick Hoyland – Pekin Bantams Breeder

| Poultry Blogs Network | February 4, 2010

Derrick-Hoyland-3

How long have you been keeping birds?

I have been keeping birds for about 60 years – virtually all my life, I will be 70 this year so since I was about 10 I suppose. I was brought up on a farm and we always had poultry and ducks. The breeds we had were the norm in those days, like Sussex, RIR, but it would be around 33 years ago that I first started with the Pekins.

The first ones I bought were a pair of Blue Pekins from Dewsbury Auction for my 9 year old daughter, Judith, who showed them at a pet show; she got a second and a special, so it all started from there really with Pekins.

Derrick-Hoyland-2Derrick-Hoyland-1 When do you start your breeding programme?

I like to start early, if I can get a few eggs in January or February, and go on till the end of May. I used to breed nine colours, but have cut down to 5 now. I have about 11 breeding pens on the go, and tend to use incubators. Pekins are not fantastic brooders, although having said that, the buff and the partridge seem to be more prone to go broody than the other colours. Some people swear by broodies, but I find when you have got the eggs, you don’t have the broodies and when you have a broody hen, you don’t have the eggs, so thats why I tend to just use incubators. I usually try to hatch over about 300, but last year I only did 250, mind you, now I’m only breeding 5 colours I intend to cut that down to about 120 or so. Out of those 120, I would keep a few of each colour, about 4 females and a couple of  cockerels.

At what age do you start to sort out your show and breeding stock?
You can spot the good’ns more or less straight away, when they hatch, because you are looking for a short wide one, they then go through that scraggy stage, but when they start to feather up, you can be sure of the good ones then. You will most probably find that the ones you thought were going to be good at hatch, are the ones that come back looking good. You will find that with Pekins they tend to get better with age.

What makes a good show Pekin?
I use 3 words to describe a good bird, ‘Short, Wide and Deep’ Short back (meaning short in length), wide back (meaning broad width ways) and deep body, (meaning the front tilts forward) and a good specimen should tilt from back to front. When you’ve got that it means you will have the ‘type’ that’s important for this breed.

What do you feed your birds?
Well I don’t have any secret feeding regime, I feed them on ordinary growers pellets, they go on that when they are about 8 or 9 weeks old. I am a big believer in cod liver oil that I mix in with the pellets, it gives them a nice sheen on the feathers. I don’t use any grain at all, just the growers and I pay about £5.95 for 25 kilos, so that’s not too bad.

What do you see for the future of the breed?
I see a good future, I think there are a lot of new people coming in and starting to keep the breed. A lot of youngsters are coming in and showing interest in Pekins, especially down in the south, which is really good to see. I think the Pekin Club is in really good shape at the moment. The Pekin is a popular breed and we get over 300 entries at our club show in Stafford, the record is 366 in 2002. I think the future for the breed is very good.

Images and Text copyright Fancy Fowl 2010. All rights reserved.

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Poultrykeeper.com is made up of a small group of enthusiasts that enjoy keeping and writing about poultry. There are over 350 articles on the site, including product and book reviews, show reports, breed photos and technical articles from poultry vets.
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Llamas as guardians for chickens!

| Poultry Blogs Network | January 27, 2010

llamas-chickens

Michelle Garner of the Battery Hen Welfare Trust keeps two llamas in her field with her chickens and has seen them chasing off foxes and dogs that have enter the field. She tells us a little more about her llamas and chickens.

O.K – so you want some hens, but you have a family of foxes next door? You have a large flock and can’t keep them in a secure run? Your land makes electric fencing difficult and unreliable? There is another solution – ever thought of Llamas? 

Well first let’s get this one out of the way, no, they don’t usually spit. They might spit at each other when play fighting gets out of hand, or when they feel threatened and cornered (vets are good at getting that response from mine!) but rarely directly at people, more often a warning shot into the air. A llama that spits randomly and without provocation has had bad experiences with people and is unusual.

Now, if you have never considered llamas, this might seem a bit of a leap, but if you have a smallholding, or an acre or more of grass keep or grazing, they make a lot of sense. And if you also keep hens or sheep, they will guard hens and lambs from foxes and dogs too.

Llamas (and their smaller cousins, alpacas) are members of the camel family and originate from South America. The alpaca is bred primarily for its fleece which grows continually, and so needs annual shearing. Although they also have guarding instincts, due to their size they are not generally as well suited to the job as llamas, and the need for annual shearing adds to the husbandry tasks associated with them. Indeed, in America many alpaca farmers use llamas to guard the alpacas from coyotes and even bears! If you are primarily after a guardian, then a llama is the best suited to the job.

llama-chickensThe llama can be kept out all year, in all weathers, appreciating a simple field shelter or natural shelter from trees to offer some protection from very wet or very hot weather. About an acre of land in addition to the land required by the stock to be guarded will support a llama. They are hardy and generally healthy, needing only the same vaccinations as goats and sheep, and not suffering any ‘exotic’ diseases. Indeed, they are less illness and accident prone than sheep (mind you, what isn’t?!) not being very likely to suffer fly strike or lameness, and can be contained by standard post and rail fencing. They have soft padded feet, and so are very gentle on the ground and eat less weight for weight than a sheep. A llama can live over 20 years, and their working life as a guardian lasts about 10 to 12 years. They do not need shearing, unless a heavily fleeced animal is chosen, when shearing every two years might be required to prevent matted animals over heating. Nails should be checked regularly, although many never need trimming.

Not every llama makes a good guardian, just like not every Labrador puppy can be a guide dog. And not everyone who breeds llamas has the expertise to recognise and rear the ideal guardian llama, so it is important to visit many breeders and websites such as that of the British Llama Society which has links to breeders all over the country. Although generally ‘pet’ llamas should be kept in groups of at least two, the guardian llama works alone, being brought up to consider the hens, sheep or other animals in his field to be his ‘herd’. The guardian llama is a gelded male, gelded at the right time for the job, which has been brought up properly with other llamas, and to be friendly yet respectful towards people and other livestock including familiar dogs. He will keep his charges together and keep them in sight, and, if a predator such as a fox or an unknown dog, come onto his territory he will approach with his head held low to the ground, gathering speed as he approaches. This is usually enough to send the predator packing, but if the llama gets close enough they will also strike with their front legs, and are capable of unique growling and gurgling noises.

I have two llamas, bought as pets not guardians, and I have seen them chase foxes and a dog from their field. They do take a great deal of interest in the hens, and the hens, being ex-battery birds, will chase the llamas as much as the llamas try to herd the hens! Llamas are great as pets if you have the land to keep them. They are not usually cuddly animals, and learn to tolerate physical contact with people rather than enjoy it. They are aloof at times, yet inquisitive and gentle. They are great fun to take for walks, and generally lead very well if taught properly and kindly from an early age. And if you have a llama, or start looking into llamas, you will discover a whole community of llama keepers out there who have been keeping these wonderful animals a big secret!

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