Category: luckycluckers
Who needs nesting boxes?
Not Lucy (Lucille Ball) who finds this bin of bedding pellets just fine and out of the way. What a cozy comfy space to leave us an egg a day!
Silkie Broody Mama gets 4 new Chicks
We’re nominees for the group hatch-o-holics on Facebook for sure. We’ve recently hatched our third round in the incubator (and have reset round 4 with farm fresh eggs from 3 different farms PLUS ours! Talk about magical mixes emerging from our eggs… Back to the original story that was our…
Black Sex Link Chickens
New theory that Melvin and Marvin are Black Sex Links? The Black Sex-Link is an excellent brown egg layer. It was created from a Barred Rock hen and a Rhode Island Red cockerel. This creates a very versatile bird that is a great egg layer, has the temperament of a…
First Hatching Chicks
Part of the fun of a farmyard chick is trying to figure out who the parents are that bring about the chicks characteristics. Here we’ll recap our chicks that hatched and try to match with the parent combo that brought them about. Play along! Aside from DNA testing our best…
Hatching as a hobby…
or a new addiction! You decide. So, the best Christmas Gift this past year was an incubator! It was gifted to our Mother Clucker Sandi, however, she doesn’t have to be in charge of it just yet. Al – the gifter, has become the egg setter extraordinaire! Our first set…
Americana
Our Americana will give you an assortment of colored eggs from turquoise to olive, to light brown. The Americana breed comes from the Araucana and Ameraucana mix and has different color plumage variations. It is because of this genetic combination that our birds are not meant for exhibition. Docile, Friendly…
York, our new Australorp chick
One of Frick’s adopted chicks was York – and Australorp. Here’s more: Our Americana will give you an assortment of colored eggs from turquoise to olive, to light brown. The Americana breed comes from the Araucana and Ameraucana mix and has different color plumage variations. The Australorp is an Australian…
Frick and her adoptees
We had a hen go broody for several weeks. In order to speed things along with getting her back to “normal” we adopted some chicks from Rural King to get the process going. Here’s Frick and her adopted brood of chicks.
All those nesting boxes, and the ladies lay in the weeds…
We put a pile of tall grasses into the yard for the chickens to peck around in. Little did we know they would choose that as their favorite spot to lay eggs! Just last night, after not finding any green eggs in the boxes, Sandi went to check other spots…
We’ve gotten eggs!
We posted our first egg on instagram on Thursday, May 20th! Since then we’ve gotten almost 2 dozen keepers – and found a bunch of soft shelled/first eggs around the coop and under their roosts. We imagine the first egg is like, whoa, what’s this? Not being sure they just…