Chickens on blocks for the winter

Because Jason is from Texas, where there are no doubt 1979 Corvairs or Pintos or Mustangs up on blocks with abundance, he gets to call the below arrangement “putting chickens on blocks” for the winter.

What it really means is, that the weather in Seattle is too cold for the chickens to dig up the lawn with any hope of the lawn redeeming itself, and the nightime temperatures are getting close enough to freezing that the possibility of snow is getting more likely. Snow isn’t that common in Seattle proper, but it does shut down the city, and the chickens complain no end when it does happen.

The chickens of course don’t understand why they are being confined to one spot in the yard under the deck. And they give us the beady eye. Especially bossy.

 

Temperatures closer to freezing also mean we finally enter the ritual days of shutting the coop door at night and having to let the chickens out in the morning. For folks who build their own coop, or have a large building as a coop this isn’t a big deal. For those of us with the Eglu from Omelet, it’s a really important thing to remember letting the chickens out each morning – they will die of dehydration else.

Recently Jason realized that Shy Chicken had thrown herself bodily at the coop door and managed to open it because he hadn’t sealed it properly the night before.  They do make loud thumping noises if he is late -kinda ominous which is why he tends to set an early alarm for chickens, open the door, and then stagger back to the house and sleep for another hour. (Note: the door you see in the photo below is the “egg bowl door” not the coop door – the coop door that lets them out into the run is hidden by the tarps)

The other thing you will see in these photos – besides creative use of the skimpier tarps the Omlet folk offer for sale – is a lot of power cords. It’s not that exciting and we don’t “heat the outside” – but we do try to put a heating element (aquarium light I think is the techincal term) in the water dish so that the water isn’t frozen. Chickens can dehydrate outside the coop too if their water is frozen.

I’ve been reading around and tried to share the tidbits about winter and lights that other agricultural extension and professionals talk about, but this is what we do and so far the chickens have lived. It helps we have a milder climate here in Seattle than other places.

Oh yes – the egg production for us (since we don’t apply lights to keep the hens producing) has gone to the point we need to buy eggs at the store now. Sad, but true. Winter is the time of Yuppie egg spending for us – we’ve been spoiled in our omega egg hen production in the summer and now we must pay to support that lifestyle!

 

 

 

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Wintertime chickens and molting

It’s true, felted chickens have no feathers to lose…

As I ramble around the Internet looking for good chicken resources and stray factoids, I came upon this one – winter lighting that prevents molting (Robert Palmondon’s chicken newsletter). Other sources around the Web note that changes of seasons toward less light can inspire molting, but folks disagree on whether home chicken raisers should bother trying to “up egg production” during the winter by adding additional lights in the coop.

Meanwhile, for the detail-lovers in the crowd, the Mississippi Agricultural extension informed me that chicken molting has a definitive feather sequence, see more info here.

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Chicktionary – Winter Version

Sometimes it’s the little things that crack me up. Like how Club Bing’s Chicktionary has a new look.

I kinda hope there’s a snowday because the anagram-finding can get ridiculously addictive.

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Kauai aka Chicken Island

When Seattle gets too gloomy, we tend to take a vacation that as one of our long suffering house-sitters puts it, allows us to “cheat on our chickens with other chickens.”

The ridiculous thing about Kauai is of course, the sky actually looks like the above.  Since chickens struggle to fly, you will not see them flying in the skyscape, but you will see them doing “chicken takeovers” of various tourist traps.

Because chickens can be so numerous and heartfelt in their clucking for a bit of your tourist chips or snacks, the government has put up signs.

This is what it looks like when chickens see tourists. This parking lot is near the Spouting Horn (think Ol’ Faithful Hawaiian style) which is an attraction also featuring a craft fair nearby.

The above vendor had closed down his booth but that didn’t stop Aggro Chicken from hunting for leftover goodies!

Meanwhile, a rooster felt it necessary to take on a truck. Note the fancy tropical plumage – that rooster has Red Jungle Fowl in its ancestry ( the tropical chicken brought over by the polynesians way before domestic chickens made their way here). The domestic chickens and the Red Fowl have shacked up indiscriminately over the years in the forests of Kauai.

But they will also make due with hedges, gardens, etc.  You can see online that there is a  a lot of debate about where all the chickens on Kauai come from. And not everyone likes them. But we do, since we are tourists. If anything Jason was sad our hotel didn’t have as many chickens around it as last year.

He had to make do with the Grand Hyatt’s black swans.

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Chickenshake

A co-worker sends this animated GIF along. Betsy refuses to post it.

Chicken Shake

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Chicken news roundup

 

(This is a photo of our chickens, just for fun, in the happier summer days)

While a good Samaritan in Maine was able to save the humans when a standalone garage with an attached chicken coop ) caught on fire, seven chickens perished. An Idaho coop had lamp issues and also caught on fire.

Apparently chickens and their eggs can help your memory (or rather, protect against loss of memory due to aging)

Anti-boss rage incident from chicken plucker in trinidad asked to pluck 20 more chickens. Not as high drama as the airline attendant shooting off down the plane slide, but as the economy worsens you can see more of these stories as likely to appear.

But it seems communities are mellowing to the idea of folks raising chickens themselves. Check out the victory in Corpus Christi  Texas for one chicken owner and a Pasco, Washington  chicken owner’s request for permission from her governing city council.

If I can get it done, the next “how to chicken” post from Jason or me will be about “putting the chickens up on blocks” for the winter.  Why we do it, even though they bawk and moan about it a lot….

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More chicken video game stuff – make your own chicken model!

For all you Maya enthusiasts out there who want to populate your 3D games with a little something- something hella chickeny , here’s a nice resource:

http://www.spafi.org/maya-modeling/make-a-chicken-model-using-nurbs-and-sub-divisions

 

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Even chickens get caught up in Christmas sales

Chicken running for her phone

‘Tis the season. Sorta.  Honestly if you dump a bowl of popcorn over their heads – it’s Christmastime to chickens.

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What I will do for a plush chicken

I don’t normally mix work and offtime but I need to show you this.

I first saw this chicken in a coworker’s office. I asked him how he got it and he said “I used to run Club Bing – this is from Chicktionary.”

What is Club Bing? Club Bing is a bunch of games related to searching that Bing.com hosts at http://www.clubbing.com (I know it seems like it should be a nighclub site but, no).

So, I wheedled. And wheedled. But he would not give up the chicken. He said “C’mon Betsy… you can just win one for 3,000 tickets.”

So I went over to Chicktionary during my lunch breaks.

It is an anagram, word extraction type game. You create words from the letters you are given and the score/words are kept on the egg rows.  It has a completely over the top twangy theme song and then the sound effects kill me. 🙂  Also, the chickens don’t sit still while they wait for you to type out the words you find.

For a view of what a partially completed game looks like…(there’s no timer, you are just going for higher scores and higher tickets).

Try it out for yourself: http://www.clubbing.com/Pages/Games/GamePlay.aspx?game=Chicktionary&mode=play

 

 

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Funky Chickens in China-Shanghai

This is an eatery I passed on the way to the Alchemist, a molecular cocktail bar in Shanghai that I loved enough to take photos and videos of the drinks. But I was attracted by the chicken art of this place’s marketing….

Also, you can’t help but be drawn into a restaurant claiming its in a mansion…

 

Though I guess having the mansion with possibility of A, B,C,D, and E components cheapens it a bit.  Ah, well. To make up for it…

Here’s a photo of the foggy drinks at the Alchemist… La Flora Fixe!

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