Feather Picking and Bare Bottoms

While I’m in Italy this week, I’m revisiting and sharing my top posts. A lot of you (tens of thousands!) have found me via my FAQ about feather picking and bare butts. 

black star

 

Seeing a usually sleek or fluffy, full-feathered hen with bald spots can send the chicken keeper into a tizzy. Sometimes it’s a cause for alarm, but often, it’s a part of the animal’s normal lifecycle. Seeing a hen pick feathers off of a flock mate can also send the owner into a panic.

Jasper

 

Sometimes it’s cause for concern, but sometimes it’s a social behavior that all of the hens are happy with. I’ve written about that in the pecking order FAQ. Right now we’re heading into molting season. Feathers are flying. Loose feathers are enticing the hens to pluck. Bottoms are bare. Necks are scrawny.

bare neck

Unless your hens have raw or bleeding skin, there’s no cause for concern. However, it does mean that you have to schedule a thorough coop clean after all of the feathers drop. Your hens will start the winter with new coats in a tidy coop.

Off to Italy!

I’m in Italy! Later this week, Karen Pryor will be speaking at the TAGteach World Summit, and I’ll be there. It’s so exciting that this effective and positive training method that she helped to create is spreading around the globe. Karen is a good friend and we enjoy traveling together. We’ve done a number of writing retreats to delightful small cities in New England – we hole up in our rooms during the day, typing away on our keyboards, and come out for meals and conversation, (And often to pop into a shoe shop.) So, when she asked if I’d like to join her in Verona, of course I said yes! We’re taking a few days before and after the conference to explore the area and enjoy the food.

I’m looking forward to spending three days immersed in TAGteach. Using TAGteach protocols enables me to impact on behavior in a clear, effective and positive way. It helps me to focus on the goal behavior and break it down into incremental, doable, rewardable steps. I’m using it more and more as I move further into my work with horses, It’s my preferred way to communicate to a horse owner about how to engage with her animal. I’m sure that I’ll come away from Verona with new tools and a better understanding of this training perspective.

I’ll likely also come home with a pair of shoes.

While I’m away, Steve will be holding down the fort. I’ve told the boys that they are to be on their best behavior.

goats

I’ll be gone through September 8. I won’t be able to blog from Italy, but I didn’t want to leave this space blank for so long. So, I’ve looked over my most popular posts, revised them, and have queued them to go up while I’m away.

Ciao!

Polite Goats

Polite. Goats. Two words you don’t expect to see together. But my boys are.

I’d never had goats before I got these twin brothers six years ago. However, I’d heard enough stories about goat antics to expect trouble, and when they arrived I could see the mischief in their two-month old eyes. I knew that I’d have to do some training. It turns out that of all of the animals that I’ve worked with (horses, dogs, fish, chickens, rabbits) that goats have been the most unmitigated joy to train. They are eternally optimistic and believe that whatever is happening will turn out to be excellent. I try my best to fulfill their world view for them.

Pip and Caper never fail to greet me with great enthusiasm. However, you can imagine that it is not a good idea to open a door when a 100-pound goat is standing on it.

Caper

 

I taught the goats to get down when I say off, and to back up on the word back, or a finger wiggle.

goats back

 

The goats love treats, and I love giving them – they are such happy, smiling, tail-wagging, appreciative animals! But goats tell each other what’s what by charging into each other, and they show off with head butts. I needed to give them an alternative way to communicate with me, so I gave them stumps. Pip and Caper jump up on them when I say Go, go! which is great, because instead of running into me, they hurry onto their stations.

to stumps

 

I assigned a stump to each goat. That way there’s less (although there is still some) jostling for position.

on stumps

 

After the treats are dispensed (in this case, peanuts) I give the universal all done signal.

all done

These truly are polite goats. Somehow, though, their good manners don’t seem to put a crimp in the chaos they cause or the trouble that they get into. Which is fine by me. I wouldn’t want them to lose an ounce of their joie de vivre

I’ve written about my training techniques on my website, The Cooperative Horse. I also have several videos showing snippets of training on my YouTube channel. More will be coming this fall!

(Note: These are new stumps. The old ones rotted away. Caper now has a lower stump to accommodate his gimpy foreleg.)

(Also note that the “goat berries” on the ground all appeared in one day. That entire area had been swept clean the day before. My goats are polite, but they’re not tidy. Goats require a lot of care and manure management.)

A Use For Those Zuccs

It’s that time of year. Blink and you have zucchini that could be used as little league baseball bats. My neighbor spent a week at the beach. He wasn’t worried about what to do with the massive zucchinis when he returned from vacation – he knew who’d appreciate them. Yesterday, on my front porch, I found a paper bag filled with summer squash.

I like to feed treats to the hens that take them time to work on. I like them to have to eyeball novel things. This keeps them busy and engaged, and it’s far healthier for the chickens than gorging on easy-to-eat tidbits.

The tough-skinned zucchini were perfect.

Owly contemplated how to begin.

owly

 

 

Even Twiggy, now integrated into the flock of Gems, skitted around to see.

Twiggy

 

 

Onyx, in a terrible state of molt, stayed on the end of the line, but she still was able to peck away.

lineup at zucc

 

 

When everyone else is tired of the excess of late-summer zucchinis, my girls say Bring them on!

a crowd

 

Are your hens helping you to cope with the harvest? Using up vegetables that no one else wants? Leave a comment!

Tonka is on R & R

The weather at the end of July was sweltering. The horses were sweating just standing still. Tonka seemed a tad stiff. Under saddle he wasn’t lame but he felt off to me. Despite fresh water in his trough in the turnout, and full water buckets in his stall, the barn owner and I worried that he wasn’t drinking enough. I added electrolytes to his daily ration. That seemed to help, but then, a day later, he came in from the paddock with this rock stuck in his shoe.

stone in shoe

 

In all my years with horses, I’ve never seen such a massive rock jammed so tightly into a shoe. I had to use a hammer to knock it out. Tonka had likely been playing in the paddock and somehow stepped on this rock just so. It was one of those bizarre and unavoidable mishaps. I don’t know how long he was walking around, off-kilter because of that rock. But, Tonka didn’t seem stressed, or in pain.

Still, it was fortuitous that the blacksmith was already scheduled to put on new shoes the next day.

blacksmith

 

The outside of the horse’s hoof is like our fingernails, there’s no feeling in it. Shoes can be nailed right on. But, closely under the sole of the foot there are bones and tissue and blood. Some horses have sturdy feet and can go barefoot. Unfortunately, Tonka’s soles are flat, and here in rocky New England he needs shoes to elevate and protect the bottoms of his hooves. Without shoes he walks around ouchy. So, it was with much relief that Georgia, the blacksmith, trimmed and tested his feet and said that there was no obvious bruising. He trotted out sound on the pavement but in the soft footing of the indoor ring, Tonka was lame. This spoke to a muscle issue. The vet was called, and the consensus was that Tonka had pulled his shoulder while walking around uneven because of that rock. This would take some time to heal. Tonka was put on rest and relaxation.

Some horses don’t take to R & R, but Tonka is a mellow guy. I go daily and hand-graze him in the tall grass.

in grass

 

He’s in a small turnout, where, hopefully, he can’t overdo it. You can see that he’s been enjoying rolling in the dirt.

dusty horse

 

After a grooming session, I  put him back into his stall, gleaming. Tonka is shining with good health and wondering why life is suddenly so boring.

in stall

 

He’s almost back to being fully sound, but not quite yet. I’ll be back in the saddle and exploring new trails in September.