Tuesday, September 22, 2015

In Idaho

We are in Idaho now. We are living with Shyloh until our house is available. Our chickens are so happy. While we were here I found a wild black kitten, and gave it to Shelbie. Shelbie loves it and she named it "Sammy." We miss everybody in California. We hope to come down in November. I took a pic of a rainbow the other day, and of Sammy. Sammy is much bigger in real life, he just looks big in pictures. Then I took a pic of my happy hens. Sorry about the mess in the backyard! I also took a pic of Minnie our chick.

Poppet

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Our move to Idaho

Hi everyone this is Poppet, surprisingly I am not writing a post about chickens. I am doing this post to tell you guys, we are making a move to Idaho Wednesday September 2nd, and I am just asking for prayer. It is going to be hard leaving everything we know here. Our house is sold, and we are looking at a house in the middle of country, and city. So please be praying for us. We will hopefully be coming to California twice a year, to visit people.   I know that Jesus is with us so we have no need to be afraid.











"Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the LORD your God will be with you wherever you go."   

Sunday, August 23, 2015

Leghorn chickens

Hi everyone today I am going to write about the leghorn, this is a leghorn rooster, he is proud and beautiful. 
Leghorns are good layers of white eggs, laying an average of 280 per year and sometimes reaching 300–320. They have a good feed-to-egg conversion ratio, needing around 125 grams per day of feed. Leghorns rarely exhibit broodiness and are thus well suited for uninterrupted egg laying. The Leghorn is a light breed that matures quickly; it is not considered a viable meat producer. Leghorns are active and efficient foragers. They typically avoid human contact and tend to be nervous and flighty.
Due to their prolific egg-laying, they are preferred by laboratories for embryonic and avian biological research.
The origins of the Leghorn are not clear; it appears to derive from light breeds originating in rural Tuscany. The name comes from Leghorn, the traditional anglicisation of Livorno, the Tuscan port from which the first birds were exported to North America. The date of the first exports is variously reported as 1828, "about 1830" and 1852. Initially called "Italians', they were first referred to as "leghorns" in 1865, in Worcester, Massachusetts.
The breed was included in the American Standard of Perfection in 1874, with three colours: black, white and brown (light and dark). Rose comb light and dark brown were added in 1883, and rose comb white in 1886. Single comb buff and silver followed in 1894, and red, black-tailed red, and Columbian in 1929. In 1981 rose comb black, buff, silver, and golden duckwing were added.
The breed was first introduced to Britain from the United States in 1870, and from there re-exported to Italy. White Leghorns that had won first prize at the 1868 New York show were imported to Britain in 1870, and brown Leghorns from 1872. Pyle Leghorns were first bred in Britain in the 1880s; gold and silver duckwings originated there a few years later, from crosses with Japanese Phoenix or Yokohama birds. Buff Leghorns were first seen in Denmark in 1885, and in England in 1888. 
This is a mother leghorn, and chicks.

Thursday, August 20, 2015

I am sorry everyone

Hi everyone I am sorry I accidentally posted a post without  writing on it. I am going to write on it















Peter replied, "Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit."

Araucana chickens

Hi everyone, this is a Araucana hen, she is super cute. Down below is a adorable chick, and a handsome rooster.
When the Araucana was first introduced to breeders worldwide in the mid-20th century, the genetics that produced tufts were recognized to also cause chick mortality Two copies of the gene cause nearly 100% mortality shortly before hatching. The tufted gene is dominant, however. Because no living Araucana possesses two copies of the tufted gene, breeding any two tufted birds leads to half of the resulting brood being tufted with one copy of the gene, a quarter being clean-faced with no copy of the gene, and a quarter of the brood dead in the shell, having received two copies of the gene.
In the decades to follow, most breeders took one of two tacks—either to preserve the old style of bird, or to breed out the tufts while increasing productivity.
In 1976, the first standards for the breed were accepted by the APA, conforming to the traditional style. This was followed, in 1984, by a second standard for the "improved" variety.


Approximate weight

Rooster 2.7–3.2 kg 6–7 lbs
Hen 2.3–2.7 kg 5–6 lbs
Bantam Variety Aracuana
Rooster 740–850 g 1.6–1.87 lbs
Hen 680–790 g 1.5–1.75 lbs 




Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Pecking with Poppet - meet speckles


Hi everyone I am sorry that this got done really late, I am finally getting to do "Pecking with Poppet". Today I am going to do Speckles.

This is Speckles she is my partridge silkie, she is super cute, her head is super poofy, so some times I have to put a pony in her hair! ( the feathers on her head.) She loves to eat grape leaves, and oatmeal. She is super sweet, and she loves to be held. She is also a mama because she hatched three chicks, two of them are Ameraucanas, and one is a Easter egger. The Easter eggers name is "lilly" witch turned out to be a boy, so we had to bring it in. The Ameraucanas were, maddy, and missus penguin, maddy was a boy to so we had to turn her in to. Then when missus penguin was a baby she was dropped on her head, so she went blind from brain damage, and soon died, the sad part is, she was a girl, our only girl.



 Then the LORD God formed a man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being.

Sunday, August 9, 2015

Ameraucana chickens

This is a Ameraucana hen on eggs, she is ADORABLE, and pretty. They make awesome mothers, and good pets. The Ameraucana is one of the few chicken breeds to lay blue eggs. The Ameraucana has a tail and is muffed and bearded. The earlobes are small and round, the wattles small or absent; earlobes, comb and wattles are all red. The shanks are slate-blue, tending to black in the Black variety. The earlobes are small and round, the wattles small or absent; earlobes, comb and wattles are all red. The shanks are slate-blue, tending to black in the Black variety.


Weight Male: Standard: 6.5 lb (3 kg)
Bantam: 30 oz (850 g)[1]
  Female: Standard: 5.5 lb (2.5 kg)
Bantam: 26 oz (740 g)[1]
Egg color Blue in various shades
Comb type Pea

Americana rooster






This is a Ameraucana rooster, he to is cute. They make good fathers.

 These adorable little things are Ameraucana chicks. They are so adorable.