Black Sex Link Pullets

Rangergord

Songster
Jan 22, 2021
228
663
156
British Columbia, Canada. Peace River Region.
My Coop
My Coop
It’s now summer and the 26 chicks I started with on April 28 are now 10 weeks of age. I am glad I did not order them any earlier as it was a late, cool spring. I used an Ohio brooder and it really did an excellent job of keeping the chicks warm and comfortable. By mid June it was warm enough and they were feathered enough to go out side the coop.

I am very pleased with these Red Rock Cross BSL pullets. They eat just a bit more than Red Sex Links according to the feed tables. I really like the feather color soft black, and red with a blue green sheen. If it’s a bit cool, but sunny they can sit in the sun and warm up quickly as their black feathers absorb solar radiation easily. Might be a problem in a hot climate but here in the north it’s a big benefit!

My birds are very quiet and well mannered . They prefer not to be caught but will cuddle into your arm nicely if you insist. I have enjoyed taking care of them. I now have 23 down from 25 because they escaped from the fenced run by climbing up on some pallets beside the fence and flying the coop. There were 10 that stayed behind to be discovered by me about an hour or so later when I returned from lunch. There were magpies cawing in the woods beside the coop. I grabbed a machete and leaped into the jungle like growth of the forest. I found a couple hens hiding under logs on the ground. Black chickens are very hard to see in shady forest! Then I found feathers...aaagh! At least one had been killed. Had the magpies killed it or just scavenged the remains. I saw a fox in the yard the previous day and a bear had passed by the day before that. Lots of potential culprits but I still don’t know who was responsible.

Well I did not run across any more hens after walking my entire five acres and notifying the neighbors. So I went back to the coop to work on securing the fence. It’s now 7 feet high and the problem solved. Over the next 36 hours, 13 of the 15 escapees returned one by one to stand outside the fence and begged to be let back inside. They still made me chase them down to be caught and placed back inside the run. They were very happy to be reunited. The woods looked so inviting but it turned into a quick death and there was no grain out there. I think they quickly realized things were a lot better.in the coop than out in the woods. Definitely I realized that my woods are not ideal for free ranging and that’s they way it is.
 

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Rangergord

Songster
Jan 22, 2021
228
663
156
British Columbia, Canada. Peace River Region.
My Coop
My Coop
The legend is true! Chickens do eat Comfrey. These pullets just go nuts for it. My old hens would not touch comfrey. I figure whoever raised them as chicks, probably fed them leftover hostess twinkies and spoiled their appetite for healthy food.
They get three servings a day, along with grass and clover and horsetail weed.

I put this wood frame inside the run to build a series of compost piles. I am adding kitchen scraps except for coffee grounds and egg shells no matter if they eat it or not as fodder for the compost. The goal is to create three piles of compost to host insect populations within the run. These insects are the most useful part of free range diet and are normally depleted in a fixed run. The compost piles allow a rotation of this protein source without moving the run.
 

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TheDawg

Enlightened
Premium Feather Member
14 Years
Jan 18, 2008
74,133
320,671
1,886
You can actually add the egg shells too. Not sure about coffee grounds. But chickens love egg shells and it’s good calcium for them.
 

Rangergord

Songster
Jan 22, 2021
228
663
156
British Columbia, Canada. Peace River Region.
My Coop
My Coop
Thanks, Dawg, Yes, I am saving the egg shells in a separate container now. Previously I just tossed them in the compost. I don’t want the hens getting a taste for eggs and I have plenty of oystershell and limestone available when they are ready for it. They are 11 weeks old right now and I probably won’t introduce calcium until after week 16-18. I will spread the eggshells under my fruit trees. Coffee grounds will also be used as fertilizer but I would rather the chickens not get them mixed with their food.
 

TheDawg

Enlightened
Premium Feather Member
14 Years
Jan 18, 2008
74,133
320,671
1,886
Thanks, Dawg, Yes, I am saving the egg shells in a separate container now. Previously I just tossed them in the compost. I don’t want the hens getting a taste for eggs and I have plenty of oystershell and limestone available when they are ready for it. They are 11 weeks old right now and I probably won’t introduce calcium until after week 16-18. I will spread the eggshells under my fruit trees. Coffee grounds will also be used as fertilizer but I would rather the chickens not get them mixed with their food.
Ah okay sorry, must’ve missed the age. That sounds like a good strategy. That said though, about the taste for eggs thing, I wouldn’t worry too much about that. I dropped eggs occasionally that they cleaned up and they still didn’t eat the ones in the boxes. Usually though I baked and then crushed mine up before giving but even with the occasional whole one it wasn’t an issue.
 

TommieW

In the Brooder
Jun 14, 2022
47
15
34
Pretty birds! We have a RIR rooster and Barred Rock hens… I did my first hatch last month and we couldn’t figure out where in the world the black chick came from… I just found out yesterday that that’s what you get when you cross the RIRR & BRH, so I set 10 more of their eggs…
 

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