Barred Rock pullet chicks |
When you open the package, you're supposed to get them out, dip each one's head into a sugar/water solution to give them electrolytes. Then you put them into the brooder with newspaper spread out and sprinkle some Chick Starter 18% Protein Ration on it. The chicks instinctively start scratching and eating and you know things are going to be okay. After a day or so, you remove the newspaper, put in feeders instead and waterers, of course.
One of the brooders with 50 Cornish Cross chicks |
Heat lamp over brooder #1 |
Heat Lamp over brooder #2 |
The title of the post was "Some Days just Stink!" Until we move them out of the garage and onto the pasture, the days that they're still in the garage, literally stink. Another reason some days stink is when you have problems with your birds. Normally, we'll lose a couple of birds here and there. They'll pile up on one another and one will suffocate or one will just die for an undetermined reason.
Warning: if you're eating breakfast: YOU MAY WANT TO FINISH BREAKFAST BEFORE VIEWING THE NEXT PICTURES.
It has been incredibly frustrating each day for the last week to wake up in the morning and go out to the brooders to feed and water and find this:
Not pretty, huh? |
Dead chick |
The body count rises... |
Rounding off the corners |
We lost quite a few birds. We keep detailed records and right now, I don't have the courage to tally the death toll. It is easy to get discouraged at times like this. Death is ugly. Birds are smelly. Dead birds don't yield meat for the freezer or money for your pocketbook. But we keep moving forward. We do the best we can and leave it in God's hands.
This morning I told Tricia that we need to look on the bright side. In every occurrence, if you look hard enough, you can find something to be thankful for.
#1 We're thankful that they stopped dying. Today we lost zero birds,
#2 If we had to lose birds, now is the time to lose them. At date of slaughter, each bird will have consumed a little over $5 worth of feed. These baby chicks might have had a nickel's worth of feed go through them so far. I'd rather them die sooner than later.
#3 The dead baby chicks are buried in the garden and their decaying bodies provide nutrients/fertilizer that will produce beans, corn, potatoes, etc. Their death is not a total loss.
Just trying to look on the bright side. And the sun will rise again tomorrow...
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