Featured Stories

How to Bathe a Chicken
May 25, 2019 · · Feed & Health

Do you know how to bathe a chicken? Do chickens like baths? As the flock master, you sometimes must force your birds to do things for their health.

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Beautiful Bantams: Black Cochins and Silver Spangled Hamburgs

Silver Spangled Hamburgs and Black Cochins prove that there is variety in the world of bantam chicken breed, and that there is a bantam for everyone!

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Ducks in The Vineyard
May 22, 2019 · · Poultry 101

This vineyard is distinct because it utilizes 1,600 Indian runner ducks as pest control. Yes, I did fly halfway around the world to come face-to-beak with hundreds of ducks.

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Chicken Mites and Northern Fowl Mites: Controlling Infestations

Red chicken mites and Northern Fowl mites can be controlled with clean coops and early detection.

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Chicken Training Made Easy

Here are some simple steps to training a chicken or turkey. Dogs and dolphins aren’t the only animals you can train to come when called.

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Raising an Indoor Pet Chicken

Add to Favorites By Wendy E.N. Thomas – We never had any intentions of raising an indoor pet chicken, but it’s funny how life goes sometimes. Our indoor pet chicken experience …

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Ask the Expert — June/July 2019
May 7, 2019 · · Ask The Expert

Add to Favorites Rock-Hard Pieces in Eggs While blending my silkies’ hard-boiled eggs to feed them back to them, these rock-hard pieces were inside. It has happened on two separate …

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Chicken Math For The Budding Production Flock
April 27, 2019 · · Chickens 101

Carefully consider coop specs, egg cartons, feed consumption, and breed-specific feed conversion rates to determine your profit.

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Balance Your Chicken’s Diet at All Ages
April 24, 2019 · · Flock Files

We know that laying hens need more calcium in their diet than chickens that are not laying eggs, but how much more?

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Virulent Newcastle Disease
April 24, 2019 · · Flock Files

Virulent, formerly called Exotic, Newcastle disease is a constantly evolving RNA virus. Anything that comes in contact with a sick bird can pass it on, and the virus can live as long as 120 days outside a host. People do not get sick from eating poultry products infected with vND, but working directly with birds can cause mild conjunctivitis. Controlling vND involves recognizing symptoms and practicing strict biosecurity.

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