My summer class started Friday... and I have an exam next week! Fortunately, it's only basic stuff. Anyway, on to the farm details.
The piglets are slowly weaning themselves. Three of our pigs decided they would rather get dehydrated than drink out of their new watering bowl (a large, heavy metal tub that they couldn't tip over and end up out of water with before the end of the morning). Fortunately they recovered fine and are back to normal. I really don't understand it. Our other pigs drink from it just fine.
Fred is lonely... but he'll get some company soon! Our mulefoots from Wilma's first litter are approaching their market date. We'll be getting the meat from those three boars soon, I hope.. I've been craving pork chops!
We bought another kiddie pool for the ducks since they refuse to stay in the enclosure and I'd rather them not be left without a large source of water throughout the day.
Now, on to some less hopeful/good news. Yesterday, it was in the 60s. Today, it was almost 90. And it went to 90 in almost 3 hours after being around 55 in the morning. We have 5 separate waterers in the meat chick's 'chicken trailer', and we added ice to it and added frozen bottles around to help keep them cool. It, and they, were in the shade. Unfortunately, the high humidity and lack of a breeze made all efforts useless. We lost one chick. Then, an hour and a half later, we checked back after picking up some feed and charcoal, and found 15 others dead - 1 died while we were removing the bodies. All the dead ones were in the back of the trailer, with the waterers dispersed through the front and middle (the top of the back end isn't openable, so we couldn't put waterers there).
It turns out that they did not know - or the heat chance was so sudden - that they couldn't get up and walk those 6-7 steps to the closest waterer to drink. Their bodies were so hot. We had to pick up the other chicks out back and put them in front of a waterer just so they would drink - they simply refused to get up and walk to it themselves. It was quite awful removing all those bodies of those poor birds.
And yet, I am completely baffled. We have raised our other 4-5 batches of meat chicks in the same trailer, in the summer, with no issues. In the shade, with waterers in the same locations... they would get up and drink. These ones would not. What would cause otherwise healthy chicks to not get up and get a drink when it's hot? Do you think the change was so sudden they were 'shocked', so to say? Or is this batch simply from a 'less intelligent' gene pool than our previous chicks? It'll be down in the 60s the next few days, then back into the 80s. I really hope these birds learn to get up and drink. There won't be anyone home during the week to pick them up and put them beside a waterer on the hotter days, and I really don't want more birds to suffer a heat stroke.
I am caught between the sheer confusion of why they wouldn't drink and and sadness that so many died what was likely a horrible death in such a short time. Anyone have any recommendations on keeping them cool? We can't really stick a fan outside, as a fan in that much heat would blow up.
Thankfully, we had no other losses around the farm... all the pigs are okay, the laying hens/roosters are good... and the ducks are great.
Well, a chipmunk died. My old arthritic cat brought it up to me while I was checking to make sure the rest of the birds were alive. He has trouble jumping on my bed but apparently no issue chasing down and catching a little chipmunk.
Last year, we raised 100 meat chicks, and lost 4 not long after they arrived, 1 other at a few weeks old from failure to thrive, and 2 from heart attacks. The previous years of smaller batches (20s and 50s) we've lost maybe 1-2. We've lost 18 total from this batch (80 chicks total, 20 were sold to another woman), and may lose more. It's just very discouraging. The weather seems to be set against us. The day we got the chicks it was in the teens - in April! The day after we remove them from the brooder to the outside world, it jumps up extremely high and the humidity was very high.
I know this is how things work... there are good batches and bad batches. But it still feels awful to lose so many 4 week old chicks to heat.
I'd appreciate any advice on keeping chicks cool, if there is any. We don't have enough waterers to cover every inch of space under the trailer for the chickens that don't want to move.
That's all for news between the last time I posted and now. Hope the next one has better events!
The ducks were fighting over a bucket of water earlier... I wish I had recorded it. They just didn't want to share one single droplet of water!