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We now have an indoor hen. That poor hen whose moult cycle started early was deteriorating, and Aimee brought her indoors.
I should mention that the arctic air came right back the afternoon of our previous post and it stayed well below zero at nights until yesterday afternoon.
So the hen is in a big tupperware. She gets locked in the bathroom during the day, away from the cats. At night she stays in the living room where we can keep an eye on her. She's in a bad way because she's silent. Hens usually cluck.
I could just quickly wring her neck, which is what I usually do with sick or injured hens, but Aimee reckons she has a chance. And so she's watching TV with us.
Now we're expecting snow. Eight to fourteen inches. But precipitation requires warmer air, so that's nice. Mainers say "it's too cold to snow."
At 2.30 pm yesterday it was a warm and sunny 25 F. (-3.5 C). Not too cold to snow.
Positively tropical.
glad I'm not the only one soft enough to bring a hen indoors... with your temperatures, I can see why!
ReplyDeletedoes sound a bit grim for the hen... time will tell.
Lucy-hen (all the hens have names and color-coded leg bands so my scientist wife can tell them apart and keep track of their doings) seems to be doing better now with the change in temperatures and is back out with her sisters in the coop.
ReplyDeleteBut her comb did get frost-bitten. Poor hen.
She didn't like TV much, either. Don't blame her. Not much on, really, even with 100s of channels of satellite.