Ugh. Finally got zip ties to mark the chickens and brought them in for their first official weigh in to discover that I'm down a pullet. There was one Wyandotte pullet that kept finding a way to escape and she finally paid the price for it. Not sure what got her, but probably a hawk or
owl.
It wouldn't be so annoying since I don't want escape artists in my flock and she was already on my list of birds to fill, but I didn't have any pullets to spare. Now I'm a bird short for my breeding program. Had plenty of cockerels to spare, and even though I'd prefer not to lose any of them, at least that would have just been a matter of losing out on a bit of meat rather than having my whole breeding program fucked.
Frustrating. This isn't a breed that's common locally, so getting a replacement is going to be difficult. I set up an alert on Craigslist to notify me if somebody lists one for sale, but that'll end up costing me a third of what the rest is the birds combined did. More likely I'll have to place a whole new chick order, or piggy back off of someone else's. Unless one of the feed stores can special order Columbians.
Most of the pullets weighed in at the mid-400 to mid-500 gram range. One of the Black Australorp cockerels was a whopping 707 grams.
In somewhat better news, I'm starting the second pass over the thistles with the scythe and dropping a scatter mulch over the top. The mulch is a mix of grasses and other various species that I'm collecting from the valley that drains into the
pond, and thus has had enough moisture for something other than thistles to establish. The grasses have mature seed heads, so not only will they hold in moisture to help vegetation establish in the "pasture" but they'll also help seed the area with desirable species for feeding the animals. I'm also looking at collecting tree
hay to supplement the rabbit feed over the winter. I think I might do mixed species bundles since there's a lot of disagreement about which species
rabbits can eat and in what quantities. I'll at least be able to collect maple and willow, which most sources agree are safe for rabbits. I'll have to see what other species I can collect along the creek and figure out which ones can actually be fed to rabbits.