We wanted to hatch some baby buffs, but our buffs weren't setting on the eggs. Meanwhile, faithful Babs was setting each day on nothing. We decided to transfer the eggs over to the Chicken Run Gang. We placed 10 eggs under her. Later, Ginger also began to help with the setting. Sunday, May 1st, we came home from church and found that four of our eggs had hatched. The next day four more hatched.
The mamas would peck at the food and then drop it on the floor for the babies.
It was fascinating to watch the teaching and learning process.
We had experimented with having the Chicken Run Gang by the pool.
This was a permanent cage we set up before we received the Andrews Sisters.
It was pretty cool having the birds better protected and sheltered, but they scratched and flung dirt all over the pool deck. It didn't take long for us to move them back to their tractor and dismantle this cage. We did take advantage of the chicken manure and tilled it into the soil and planted our garden in the same spot. It was after we moved them that we let Babs set on a clutch of eggs. The following pictures are of her setting.
Rhodie the Rhode Island Red
He's pretty, but very protective of his girls.
Patrick is the only one who is able to go inside the cage to feed, water, and collect eggs.
I'm sad to report that when our babies were nine days old, opossums got in the cage. We lost three babies that night. Then, just before they were two weeks old, a fox broke into the cage and killed four more. We are now down to only one baby left. Of course, it will probably end up being a rooster.
Farm living is rough :~(