Tag: Orpington chickens

Jack Passes The Torch To The Next Generation

Jack passes the torch To the next Generation

I cried as I carried my Boy, Jack to his final resting place earlier this week. You see, we got Jack and his siblings last September when they were just a couple weeks old, and one day when I stuck my hand in the Brooder cage to feed them, Jack jumped up on my arm and said, “This is my forever home Dad!” He quickly became my favourite and he remained very calm, loving, and easy to handle for a Rooster! He also did a good job with the Ladies! 

So, when Jack died a few days ago, after getting into something, we suspect, it was with heavy heart that I entombed him. 

While they can never replace Jack…

Thankfully, Jack was good with the Ladies!

About a month before Jack’s passing, the Ole Grey Hen went broody and hatched 5 Chicks, and the week before Jack died our hen, Whitie also hatched 5 Chicks. That means that there are at least 10 little offspring from Jack. 

Although, we’re also pretty sure that at least one of the Chicks we hatched from the incubator in February is one of Jack’s also. He’s a young Rooster, now 4 months old, who has puffy Easter Egger Cheeks, thus meaning his Momma was Little Crow, our pure Aracauna Hen, and we highly suspect Jack to be His Father, thus we’re dubbing him Little Jack, son of Little Crow and Jack. 

In addition to that, our hen, the one we call Speckle, and one of Jack’s sisters, started to set yesterday and we now have 11 eggs, maybe soon to be 12 eggs under Her. The chicks that hatch will also be Jack’s! Which means that even after Jack’s passing, Jack Passes The Torch To The Next Generation!

This may seem surprising to some, but once mated the Hen carries fertilized eggs inside her for a number of weeks! The most viable of those eggs for hatching purposes are those from within a week of mating. Since we already know Jack to be quite prolific, and the eggs under Speckle are gathered from a number of our hens, we expect these eggs are viable and that Jack’s contribution to the Farm lives on… even after his crossing the Rainbow Bridge!

Our Chickens are Really Bananas

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Our Chickens are Really Bananas

So, we built our Coop, put up the roosts, made nest boxes, and like kids with new Christmas Presents, our Chickens prefer to lay their eggs in Banana Boxes in our Car Port where we store our hay and wood, here at Briden Farm! That’s why we say, “Our Chickens are Really Bananas!” 

The Scoop on the Chicken Coop

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The Scoop at the Chicken Coop

We’ve had three groups of Chickens here at Briden Farm, all at various ages and stages! All housed in three different houses, or smaller pens, and now we’re working to move them all in a larger Coop where they’ll all coincide. This video shows the morning after the night before, when Jack and the Gang, and Henny Penny (AKA: Mother Hen) and her two chicks, Chicky and Picky, spent their first night in the new coop which we’ve built from Pallets, Slabwood, and up cycled materials. Tonight we hope to add Buddy, our big Rooster, and four others we call the Biddies, to the Coop. So, that’s the Scoop on the Coop!