It doesn’t feel like spring around here until the annuals are planted and Mr. Chicken Chick worked with me to liven up the backyard. This year, we buried hardware cloth underneath mulch surrounding plants so the chickens won’t ruin the them. Kate, our Speckled Sussex hen, always stays nearby when yard work is underway as it holds the promise of wiggly snacks!

Rachel, my Bantam Cochin Frizzle and the original flower in our backyard, surveys the container garden.
Blaze, Black Copper Marans rooster with a Partridge Plymouth Rock hen to his left.
Kate, Speckled Sussex hen.
Bertha, Partridge Cochin hen.

ellen deHeneres (a Marans hen) went broody this week and was given some chicks to adopt (the ones from P. Allen Smith’s flock, in fact). She rejected the two yellow chicks, but is a very good, fiercely protective mother to the others. I almost lost a limb when I tried to pick up one of her chicks! I have the two yellow chicks (breeds undetermined) in my office underneath an EcoGlow brooder.

Caesar, Serama cockerel.

We lost our only Bantam Welsumer hen this week due to  a prolapsed oviduct as suspected. After receiving the necropsy report, the vet at the pathology lab confirmed that a pecking injury caused hemorrhaging inside the oviduct when a vessel was punctured. So, while she could have survived the prolapse, flock members’ curiosity got the better of them, to her demise.
RIP Irene. Irene became a member of our flock the day hurricane Irene hit Connecticut in August 2011. She was always the most outspoken hen in the flock. The backyard won’t be the same without her.

Thanks for visiting and have a great week!

Kathy Shea Mormino

Affectionately known internationally as The Chicken Chick®, Kathy Shea Mormino shares a fun-loving, informative style to raising backyard chickens. …Read on

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It doesn’t feel like spring around here until the annuals are planted and Mr. Chicken Chick worked with me to liven up the backyard. This year, we buried hardware cloth underneath mulch surrounding plants so the chickens won’t ruin the them. Kate, our Speckled Sussex hen, always stays nearby when yard work is underway as it holds the promise of wiggly snacks!

Rachel, my Bantam Cochin Frizzle and the original flower in our backyard, surveys the container garden.
Blaze, Black Copper Marans rooster with a Partridge Plymouth Rock hen to his left.
Kate, Speckled Sussex hen.
Bertha, Partridge Cochin hen.

ellen deHeneres (a Marans hen) went broody this week and was given some chicks to adopt (the ones from P. Allen Smith’s flock, in fact). She rejected the two yellow chicks, but is a very good, fiercely protective mother to the others. I almost lost a limb when I tried to pick up one of her chicks! I have the two yellow chicks (breeds undetermined) in my office underneath an EcoGlow brooder.

Caesar, Serama cockerel.

We lost our only Bantam Welsumer hen this week due to  a prolapsed oviduct as suspected. After receiving the necropsy report, the vet at the pathology lab confirmed that a pecking injury caused hemorrhaging inside the oviduct when a vessel was punctured. So, while she could have survived the prolapse, flock members’ curiosity got the better of them, to her demise.
RIP Irene. Irene became a member of our flock the day hurricane Irene hit Connecticut in August 2011. She was always the most outspoken hen in the flock. The backyard won’t be the same without her.

Thanks for visiting and have a great week!
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Jeannie Palmer
Jeannie Palmer
10 years ago

The egg skelter could be fun.

cja
cja
10 years ago

Thank you for all the prizes.

Amy Poole
Amy Poole
10 years ago

I love the egg skelter!

clankeyes
clankeyes
10 years ago

Egg Skelter ! I was just looking at one of these… my friend has one.. I'd LOVE to have one also !

Teresa Marquez
Teresa Marquez
10 years ago

My condolences, Irene was such a beautiful bird. There are few things sadder than losing a member of your feathered family. ):

Also, my mother would absolutely love the egg skelter. They are such a useful and attractive way to store eggs!

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