Right away, I thought of my chickens. My chickens love live bugs. I went and got a chicken, plopped it down in my hall, and waited. It only ate one! So, figuring this chicken was defective, and grabbed a different one. This one wouldn't even think about eating one. Frustrated, I concluded I had to do it the hard way, and pick up each individual cricket, put them in a jar, and took them out to the chicken coop.
One of my hens showed especially a lot of interest, so when all the jar crickets were gone, I grabbed her. See; outside of my front door there were another 50 crickets (and I am not exaggerating). She went right to work, and in about 3 minutes cleared most of them out.
The last 2 months or so, we haven't been getting any eggs. We finally found some after we got rid of the roosters, but then it stopped again. I figured that they were hiding them, so I started looking around in the bushes all along the house. At first I couldn't find any, but a few days later, I heard one of my hens making a ruccas by my air conditioner. She had made a little nest out of leafs, and was laying right there. The good thing: I know where she is laying. The bad thing: I have no clue how to get her to lay in the hen house. Actually, there is one solution, build a new fence. The one I have right now is pretty pathetic. Half the chickens just fly over it (and that's the half that actually lays eggs)
Also, 2 of my newer hens disappeared a few days ago. I thought for sure Justin or a coyote had gotten to them. But alas, there they were this morning, as if they had never left. I'll probably find a stack of 30 eggs in the woods some day.....
Oh my word. Where do you live exactly? I need to never move there. I"m TERRIFIED of crickets. I know it's irrational but I might not sleep tonight with this image in my head.
ReplyDeleteThat is such a funny image of you plopping a hen down in your entry and 50 crickets hopping about. ha ha!
ReplyDeleteGood Luck getting your hens to lay in the hen house.
Hey lady,
ReplyDeleteI don't know how it is in Texas--but for us fall mean molting --Molting means no eggs--and really in the eyes of nature you layers would normally have a bunch of babies --so no time to lay eggs--You can try to stimulate them again by getting them some more light--red light --
And as far as your hens--clip their flight wings--It's best to do it at night--just go in there--extend a wing and clip way back just on one side--we had to do it to our duck the other day --as the cold weather required that we move him into the barn in a stall --I could not have a duck flying around in the midway of the barn--
Anyway --hope that helps--If you have any questions you know where I am --GOOD LUCK!!