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Practical Poultry Magazine No.120 Cochin buying Edição anterior

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10 Comentários   •  English   •   Family & Home (Animals & Pets)
We’re always emphasising the
importance and all-round
usefulness of spending time
with your chickens, simply
watching how they behave both individually
and as a group. It’s one of the simplest
and easiest things you can do, and should
typically be one of the most pleasurable, too.
One of the best times to do this is fi rst
thing in the morning, immediately after
you’ve let your birds out for their fi rst fl ap
and stretch of the day. The other morning,
having done just this, I was busy enjoying my
peaceful, fi ve-minute interlude as the hens
clucked contentedly. Some were drinking,
some feeding and others pecking at the
dewy grass, but one of the hybrid layers
caught my eye as she stood lustily pecking at
the pellets in our Grandpa’s feeder.
All of a sudden she stopped eating,
raised her head and stood, bolt upright
and perfectly still. Then, without appearing
to move a muscle or changing her body
position to any degree, she slowly raised
one foot off the ground, bent her leg and
tucked it tight up against her body. Not
a particularly spectacular gesture, I will
admit, but the thing that struck me was her
effortless ability to balance.
I know fl amingoes do it all the time, and
I’ve taken many photographs of chickens
standing on one leg over the years, but it was
just the smooth, almost mechanical way
this one did it that so caught my attention. It
was as though the leg she raised had been
carrying no weight in the fi rst place, and that
lifting it made absolutely no difference to
the way she was standing.
Ah well, I suppose the hen’s fancy
footwork simply serves to confi rm just how
wonderful nature is, and I feel priviledged
to have seen this tiny, insignifi cant
demonstration of it in my own back garden.
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Practical Poultry

No.120 Cochin buying We’re always emphasising the importance and all-round usefulness of spending time with your chickens, simply watching how they behave both individually and as a group. It’s one of the simplest and easiest things you can do, and should typically be one of the most pleasurable, too. One of the best times to do this is fi rst thing in the morning, immediately after you’ve let your birds out for their fi rst fl ap and stretch of the day. The other morning, having done just this, I was busy enjoying my peaceful, fi ve-minute interlude as the hens clucked contentedly. Some were drinking, some feeding and others pecking at the dewy grass, but one of the hybrid layers caught my eye as she stood lustily pecking at the pellets in our Grandpa’s feeder. All of a sudden she stopped eating, raised her head and stood, bolt upright and perfectly still. Then, without appearing to move a muscle or changing her body position to any degree, she slowly raised one foot off the ground, bent her leg and tucked it tight up against her body. Not a particularly spectacular gesture, I will admit, but the thing that struck me was her effortless ability to balance. I know fl amingoes do it all the time, and I’ve taken many photographs of chickens standing on one leg over the years, but it was just the smooth, almost mechanical way this one did it that so caught my attention. It was as though the leg she raised had been carrying no weight in the fi rst place, and that lifting it made absolutely no difference to the way she was standing. Ah well, I suppose the hen’s fancy footwork simply serves to confi rm just how wonderful nature is, and I feel priviledged to have seen this tiny, insignifi cant demonstration of it in my own back garden.


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Practical Poultry  |  No.120 Cochin buying  


We’re always emphasising the
importance and all-round
usefulness of spending time
with your chickens, simply
watching how they behave both individually
and as a group. It’s one of the simplest
and easiest things you can do, and should
typically be one of the most pleasurable, too.
One of the best times to do this is fi rst
thing in the morning, immediately after
you’ve let your birds out for their fi rst fl ap
and stretch of the day. The other morning,
having done just this, I was busy enjoying my
peaceful, fi ve-minute interlude as the hens
clucked contentedly. Some were drinking,
some feeding and others pecking at the
dewy grass, but one of the hybrid layers
caught my eye as she stood lustily pecking at
the pellets in our Grandpa’s feeder.
All of a sudden she stopped eating,
raised her head and stood, bolt upright
and perfectly still. Then, without appearing
to move a muscle or changing her body
position to any degree, she slowly raised
one foot off the ground, bent her leg and
tucked it tight up against her body. Not
a particularly spectacular gesture, I will
admit, but the thing that struck me was her
effortless ability to balance.
I know fl amingoes do it all the time, and
I’ve taken many photographs of chickens
standing on one leg over the years, but it was
just the smooth, almost mechanical way
this one did it that so caught my attention. It
was as though the leg she raised had been
carrying no weight in the fi rst place, and that
lifting it made absolutely no difference to
the way she was standing.
Ah well, I suppose the hen’s fancy
footwork simply serves to confi rm just how
wonderful nature is, and I feel priviledged
to have seen this tiny, insignifi cant
demonstration of it in my own back garden.
ler mais ler menos
Practical Poultry magazine is packed with helpful advice from incubation to housing, feeds to breeding and shows to marketing.
Practical Poultry is an informative monthly magazine that caters for enthusiasts at all levels from beginners with just a few chickens to established breeders working on small scale commercial production. If you keep poultry, you need Practical Poultry magazine.

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