The new girls are still jumping up on the back porch and
fence and then into the driveway way too often. That means listening for their
chatter from the kitchen window and doing lots of visual sightings to keep the
girls from going astray. I need chickens I can trust and Naomi is quite
displeased at this behavior and doesn’t hesitate to grab the squirt bottle once
the borders are breached! How come I didn’t have this problem with the big
girls before the fence went in a year ago?
Overall, the 6 hens get along in the yard as it’s big enough
to accommodate two moving groups. There’s still squabbling around the
bird feeders and whenever corn is tossed out as a treat. Millie has continued to
be my best buddy, coming over whenever she sees me to chat or peck at my shoes.
She always lets me pet her while the other two are more skittish when
approached. It’s been a long time since the big girls have allowed petting!
I’m about ready to begin the coop expansion and by Labor Day
it’s become quite clear that the little girls have outgrown the blue coop. They
are good sports about going to bed there but I’ve got to get them into new
quarters before we leave for California and our chicken sitters have to deal
with this. Using some scrap wood I fashion an extension to the existing coop
but leave the wall in place between both sections – I’m not that crazy! With a
bit of help from Millie who has to approve every step of the work I am able to
fashion a new home, though a little small, with its own entrance and ramp from
the roof of the blue coop. I don’t really plan well as I have a hard time
visualizing how things go together. I’m much better following an actual design
plan, which of course doesn’t exist here.
Millie investigates |
Inspecting the Work |
Taking the First Step |
The first few nights with the new coop I have to manually
transfer Millie and Nellie out of the cramped blue coop into their new digs
while Lottie has it figured out. That wore thin after a while so I let the
girls figure it out themselves. (Am I bit of a helicopter parent??)
After another week Lottie and Nellie quit their new digs and
start going up the ramp to the main coop where Flora, Gertrude and Hazel sleep
and sometimes they get chased out and
sometimes not but they persevere each night and start sleeping in the nesting
box. But Millie is bullied out every night no matter what…up the ramp, down the
ramp, up the ramp again, pecked down the ramp again. It is heartbreaking to
watch. Eventually she gives up and goes back to the new coop by herself. This goes
on for a couple weeks and I worry about her making this last transition into
the flock.
On September 11 Millie laid her first egg – a small brown
one but so so welcome. Hazel is the only layer now and she’s very sporadic so
Millie’s egg is quite exciting. I knew it was coming anytime as she had
developed the protective posture of crouching when approached suddenly plus she’s
grown so much more than the others. I’m hoping she’ll be an example for the
others! Within the first couple weeks Millie’s eggs grew in size and she had 2
ones with double yolks. Pretty neat and it came with feathers for a nice effect!