Before we went to collect two new bantam Australorps, we prepared the 'wee hoose' for our new arrivals. This is a small guinea pig house from a pet store that we store flat packed into our shed. We also set up a caged area within visual distance of our hen house. I kitted it all out with clean bedding, a perch, waterer and feeder. It rained a lot during the first week of the new hens being here so we also put some corrugated plastic sheeting over the cage to provide extra shelter.
the wee hoose |
the wee hoose with the big house in the background |
I used this first week to get them used to feeding from my hand through the cage. Bluebell was the more confident one and started taking meal worms from my hand on day two. Sunny took about five days to get used to my hand coming into the caged area. I used this opportunity to put coloured rings onto their legs. Sunny's legs were too big for the yellow ring so she got an orange one instead. Bluebell now has a blue ring.
Sunny on the left and Bluebell on the right |
After that first week, we then opened up the cage and let the new hens come out into the garden with adult supervision for a couple of afternoons. This was really to watch out for any potential violent behaviour from our three established hens. Once we could see that our older girls are really only interested in seeing the two new young girls off, and chasing them away, so that they can be by themselves, we then let them have free wander of the garden all day with the others. We always leave the cage open though in case they need to retreat. The new girls were laying eggs happily inside the wee hoose too. But every night they have tottled back to the wee hoose to sleep and have only shown curiosity in the big house when the other three are far away.
L-R: Olive, Queenie and Rosie, staying far away up the other end of the garden |
I still need to reach in and put Sunny up on the perch sometimes, but this could be because they've gone to bed and it is still light enough for the others to see her. Sunny is at the bottom of the pecking order and so possibly they are making her wary so she stays on the floor of the house.
All in all, 2 and a half weeks later and my hens are a flock of 3 and 2 and just sometimes a flock of 5.
Here is a little video of them, demonstrating that the three older hens chase the two new, younger hens away.
Here is a little video of them, demonstrating that the three older hens chase the two new, younger hens away.
It looks like a successful integration to me! Your method is very similar to how we integrate our flocks. Slow and steady! My girls at the top of the pecking order still chase the younger ones and peck at them from time to time. Gotta keep their top spots!
ReplyDeleteThey look lovely - wandering free! Interesting that Sunny doesn't always perch by herself, my SIL had several hens that never wanted to. She wasn't sure if she should leave them but I'd not thought about it being about the pecking order x al
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