Sanitation, Livestock Diversity and Health

One of the most important aspects of animal husbandry is sanitation. A clean chicken / quail / turkey coop is key to animal health. Keeping a clean coop requires weekly muckings and a steady supply of dry clean bedding. I prefer straw hay to pine shavings but both will do. It is also important to wash hands and scrape off shoes before and after entering a coop. It is especially important to wash hands after touching other birds, bedding, droppings or coops. 


I have a hand sanitizer outside of my chicken coop to avoid frequent hand washing trips inside. 


It is also important to keep poultry species separate because while a certain disease can be benign in one species it can be deadly in another. I also choose to keep several breeds in my flocks with the intent to ward off the possibility of complete flock loss through this genetic diversity. It is also crucial that any new birds be kept quarantined from established flocks until the health of the new birds can be accurately assessed. 


My chicks were housed away from other poultry and several different breeds can be seen. 


Nutrition is also very important for a flock's health. A well fed bird is a healthier bird. In addition to feed, fruit, vegetables and chicken scraps I often offer herbs to my poultry. There is some evidence to suggest that oregano, basil and rosemary have medicinal properties for poultry. A few ounces of unpasteurized unfiltered apple cider vinegar mixed into the flock's water allows for healthy digestion and cuts down on the the smell of bird droppings. 


 A few drops of apple cider vinegar and sprigs of Thai Basil and oregano mixed in water promote healthy digestion. 


To recap, keeping your flock is just like keeping yourself healthy. 

1. Wash your hands often.

2. Healthy diet.

3. A healthy caution towards new people... just kidding... but don't forget to wash your hands!

Poultry Feed Types & Feed Systems

I'm trying out a blog submission that is more typical of the types of videos I will post from here on out. Several people requested videos that were more informational and instructional. Now that I have some content on the page I'm going to be adding new content only about once a week, but the content will be more extensive. 

The first video is a brief description of the various feeds I currently use for poultry production.


Uploaded by Jake Finley on 2016-07-04.


And the second video is a demonstration of how the feed storage and delivery systems work.


Uploaded by Jake Finley on 2016-07-04.


Thanks for watching!

JIVE TURKEYS

My turkeys were purchased April 1st (no foolin') and they were probably hatched a day or two before that. I've had a well established group of hens and covey of quails for a while, but the turkeys have been an interesting learning experience. For the first week or two they looked and sounded like bigger funkier chicken chicks. I knew they were healthy because boy were they loud! 

 

Day 1

Banana for scale!

 

A few weeks in and they were a little more awkward and turkey like.  

 

The turkeys have been a lot of fun. They are very different to care for than chickens or quails. The quail are very quiet and polite. They meekly shuffle around their coop and go about their private business. The egg laying chickens I have are kind of bossy and brash and they greedily wolf down any food I throw their way. I finished up a batch of Cornish X meat production chickens about the same time the turkeys left their brooder. The Cornish were extremely dumb and greedy and clumsy. The turkeys are kind of a mixture of all three groups. They are kind of private, but they are also pretty clumsy and not very intelligent. Luckily they are sweet in their own way. The main downside is they are very poor foragers. My chicken hens will compost any feed, scraps or clippings I give them, but the turkeys seem to be much pickier and really only eat grain. Two jive turkeys. 

 

Almost three months and 20 lbs later. 

 

Enjoying a moment in the sunshine? What are you doing?

 

FLY MINION FLY!

 

NO YOU FOOL! I'M THE ONE THAT FEEDS YOU!