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12 Pita Pintas, 6 mottled red, and 6 mottled black

Brooder is ready to go, coop is set. Nervous and excited. This is our first go-around with fowl.

12 Pita Pintas, 6 mottled red, and 6 mottled black Brooder is ready to go, coop is set. Nervous and excited. This is our first go-around with fowl.

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[–] 1 pt

>Hopefully you're in the know on pasty butt. Its the only down side I've dealt with when raising chicks.>>

Well I am now, lol. Thanks, fren. The more I know the sooner, the better.

[–] 1 pt

Glad to help! The best way I've found to clean them is just a little cotton swab with warm water on it. Swab it until it comes off. Luckily it's just for the first few weeks. As far as I've seen, there is no avoiding it. The only thing is it seems to effect different breads more or less. Wyandottes had a pretty low rate but we just got some Black Australorps and those were really bad with pasty butt. They all grew up healthy but it seemed like I had to clean every single chick at some point.

[–] 0 pt

Just had a friend complaining about how her australorps were picking on her Pablo potatoes lol. Don’t know anything about either of those breeds.

But yes, I read about pasty butt today and exactly what you describe is exactly what I was planning. Warm water swab, dry butt, and I saw some advice indicating to put a dap of vaseline on the butt after it’s clear and dry to prevent more build up. Definitely a learning experience.

Chicks were not shipped today per the hatchery. Expecting they will be shipped tomorrow. We’ll see. It will be a transcontinental ride for them, so I am already feeling their pain haha.

Re-sized the brooder today (think it was too large for 12 chicks), and lined it with puppy pee pads (over top of the brown paper and paper towel lining (I know overkill). I’ve read, and again, do not know as I’ve never done this before, that it is difficult for them to navigate through pine shavings for the first few days.

Also read their initial water should be the same temp as the brooder (95-100F), with a couple of tablespoons of raw apple cider vinegar per quart of water to help with rehydration and pasty butt.

Thoughts?

[–] 1 pt

We haven't had any chicks picking on others. Maybe a bad batch. That's unfortunate. We're trying to ramp up egg production to sell locally as prices have gone up and Australorps are king. The record for egg laying was done by an australorp a 367 eggs in one year. I've never heard of the bread you are getting. They sound very interesting. Hope to hear updates!

I've never done the vaseline thing before, but heard a lot of people mention it. No reason for not doing it. Just never got around to trying it. Hopefully it works for you!

I've actually always done pine shavings. Most recently we ran out of room and I had to put a group of chicks in a bathtub with pine shavings. They still managed to walk around just fine even with that slick surface underneath. Your idea is very fancy with the pads, but if it comes time to change them out due to smell, that might be it's own adventure. With shavings, you can at least just sprinkle more on. To get nerdy, chicken poop is high in nitrogen and the smell is from that off-gassing. But nitrogen is easily bound by carbon so when you use wood shavings, you won't ever smell the poop. You'll smell the chicks, but never the poop. There's a number of farmers out there doing "deep bedding" with wood chips and you'll never smell the poop. Then if you take it one more step, once you get those pine shavings to break down into compost, it becomes incredible fertilizer because of the nutrient concentration. This has been our intense focus for the last year so I could ramble on.

I've never heard about heating the water so I couldn't say if it's a good idea. Maybe doing that could help with pasty butt. We've always just had a basic waterer in with them and they were fine. Apple cider vinegar is a great idea. We always try to get that in their water.