



Have a goodun
Wurzel
Keeping plenty of us in, Pauline. Feeding the chickens at 8.00 this morning was a Labour of Hercules - wet, blowing a gale, and having to tread over all the fallen pots from the previous night's high winds.Pauline wrote:...I'm afraid this weather is keeping me in - it is not just windy it is freezing!.....
Sounds like a decent compromise, Pauline. With those marans and legbars you must be getting eggs of different colours? Is that a Black Rock or a Welsummer at the front?Pauline wrote:Hi David, the good news is I now have all the chickens together. They are free range when I am there and they can now all go in a large roofed enclosure which surrounds their (heated) kennel where they roost. This means that when I can get out I can do so without worrying about the cat:
I hadn't spotted that! Do you ever get a run of good luck, Pauline? God knows you've earned one.Goldie M wrote:Pauline, sorry but I had to laugh at your bed collapsing...
I'm sure you do get some spectacular eggs, Pauline. Marans probably lay the most attractive ones of all....and they have beautiful plumage too.Pauline wrote:Hi David - yes, I get some gorgeous eggs. You wouldn't believe the colours. In particular the Wheaten Marans (Candy and Flossie) produce huge dark brown eggs splattered with almost black spots and the Cream Legbar (Bramble) produces blue. A cream egg from Petal (Swedish Flower) and I am told Olive is a French Black Maran? Anyway, light brown egg from her.
Yes, your rearing went awry that time, Pauline, but you did it with best intentions and gained an intimate insight into the early stages of this elusive butterfly...I have reared WLH before (well, how could anyone forget????!!![]()
) but I have not photographed larva in the wild.