Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - Paul

Pages: 1 ... 44 45 [46] 47 48 ... 58
676
Ameraucana Marketplace / South-Central District Meet
« on: October 10, 2008, 08:35:21 AM »
The correct date for the South-Central District Meet is Oct. 18.  The dead line to enter is today Oct. 10.  We hope to see many Ameraucana breeders in Sedalia, MO.  We will be showing a few.  Most of our birds are way behind what they should be, due to our extreme heat this past summer.
  We have shown at the past consecutive 8 national meets , but won\'t be going this year.  We need the week of time that it would require to show, to be spent on completing our house before this winter.  Also most of the birds aren\'t ready to show.  Hope all in attendance have a great time and do well.

Paul Smith

677
Ameraucana Marketplace / Egg Judging Criteria
« on: October 02, 2008, 08:00:09 AM »
This is what is on the judges card they have columns to mark but it wouldn\'t let me make it like the original one is.  The numbers posted by the catergory is the highest # it can be given. 1-10 and one category is 1-30.
The  maximum total points  is 100.        

   Ameraucana Breeders Club
Judges Sheet for Ameraucana Egg Contest
2007 National Meet      
     
Entry Number:___________   Class:   ___________     
     
These will be in column form on the original judging sheet
Category    
Maximum Points  
Points Award  
Optimal Quality(s)     

Shell Texture 10  non-porous, uniformly smooth throughout

     
Shell Quality 10   not thin, resistant to breakage, free of hair-line cracks, without bumps or spots     


Shell Shape  10    uniform, oval, smaller ends quite evident

     
Size  10   top priority is six eggs of uniform size, then tending to large size for class of entry     


Cleanliness  10   exteriors free of stains or evidence of
sand-papering     


Shell Color    30  blue without evidence of brown pigment, inside same shade as outside – allowing for dampness     


Freshness   10   yolks “stand up” and whites are not “runny”

     
Interior Qualities 10   free of foreign spots or other impurities, yolk size proportionate to size of eggs     


TOTALS   
100 points                     __________points
        

Disqualification:
_____ Evidence of faking including artificial coloring
_____ Eggs having been boiled or otherwise preserved
_____ No evidence of blue shell pigmentation
_____ Eggs other than true Ameraucana
   Comments:   
 

678
Ameraucana Marketplace / Egg Judging Criteria
« on: October 02, 2008, 07:11:09 AM »
I found the egg judging information we passed out and the score sheet.

Egg Contest Information
2007 National Meet

Two classes are provided: Large Fowl and Bantam.

Ameraucana eggs only.

No entry fee.

Awards will be given for the “Best” and “Reserve” Large Fowl and Bantam eggs.

Entries will consist of six eggs presented in a suitable container of the entrant’s choice.

Exhibitors may enter the same class more than once only if each entry represents a different Ameraucana variety and/or under hen or pullet status. Entries from pens or flocks of commingled varieties shall be limited to one per class and shall be designated “Various” on the entry form.

No unsolicited remarks by any exhibitor may be made within hearing of the judge during the judging process. Violations will result in automatic disqualification of all entries of the violator(s).

All entries become the property of the Ameraucana Breeders Club at the time of entry.

Two out of each entry of six eggs will be opened by the judge or the clerk to facilitate the judging of interior qualities and coloring.

Each class will be judged to third place.

Recommended equipment to be supplied by the Ameraucana Breeders Club:
   Egg Scale, magnifying glass, pencil or marking pen, butter knife for opening eggs, a container for broken shells, paper saucers, and judging cards for each entry with room for judges comments.


679
Ameraucana Marketplace / National Meet
« on: September 16, 2008, 10:33:07 AM »
  I was looking over the Minnesota State Poultry Association entry form in the Poultry Press, and noticed Premise Number, on the form!  Is it a requirement that we have a Premise Number to show in Minnesota?  I have a required import number for Minnesota, but not a Premise Number for the Animal ID.  The new import forms, which recently came in the mail didn\'t require a Premise Number.  I\'m totally against the Animal ID program and haven\'t registered our place.  I feel, with time our government will force everyone who has any animals, to be a participant in the program.  The real reason for the AIDS is, so the soon coming one world government will have total control of the world\'s food supply.

                                                         Paul Smith

680
Ameraucana Marketplace / Barred Ameraucana
« on: September 15, 2008, 09:43:09 AM »
  I invested five years in the barred project, which I scrapped when our only barred male raised in 2004 was taken by a coyote.  I went about trying to produce them all wrong, but learned a lot along the way.  I tried to find a barred Plymoth Rock cockerel but ended-up purchasing three pullets from one person and a hen from another to start with two different lines.  I used two unrelated black Ameraucana males on the two pens of barred females.  100% of the pullets were black and 100% of males were cuckoo.  The best male from each pen was mated with the best pullets from the other pen.  Best I remember the second generation produced some females that were cuckoo.  There shank and egg color never filled the required slate or sky blue respectfully, but they were good layers and meaty.  

681
Ameraucana Marketplace / Has anyone shipped adult chickens before?
« on: August 27, 2008, 10:43:28 AM »
We have sent many boxes of both breeding show birds and layers.  We use to use paper towel boxes which we modified to ship trios.  About a year ago, rule changes required special shipping boxes with filters in tack.  The required shipping boxes are expensive and three times as heavy as what we were using.

We are very fortunate to be close to DFW (Dallas/Ft. Worth).  Since Fed Ex is now carrying \"Lives\", we can send them anywhere in the continental U.S.  It was a nightmare for several years checking to see which zip codes were good for delivery for that week.  Yes, the list changed each week.
 
We must have live shipments to our local PO by 3:00 PM to catch the first truck out for the day.  There is a second truck at 5:00 PM.  Many of our birds are delivered by the next day.  Some are two day deliveries.  It is marked on the express mail label while at the PO.  Express mail lives is very expensive, but it is the only source of delivery.  We\'ve checked with other companies-UPS; Fed Ex; DHL; bus lines, etc...to try to deliver some when the PO was choosing only certain zip codes.

682
Ameraucana Marketplace / Bad News
« on: July 10, 2008, 10:03:54 AM »
Some of our youngsters enjoyed their first watermelon yesterday.  Some reason this one rotted on it\'s bottom, so we didn\'t get any-but there soon will be more!

683
Ameraucana Marketplace / ABC Officer nominations
« on: July 10, 2008, 10:02:07 AM »
I am willing to serve as SC District Director again.

684
Ameraucana Marketplace / Bad News
« on: July 01, 2008, 09:44:45 AM »
Sorry I\'ve been so slow to respond!-been busy planting more melons.  Let the human kids eat all they want first then give the rest to the chickens-even if it is only the rine.  LOL!!!

685
Ameraucana Marketplace / What to vaccinate for
« on: July 01, 2008, 09:42:20 AM »
We vaccinate for Mareks at hatching.  LT at four weeks and again at 10 weeks using the LTI-VAX at one drop in the nose.  All the older breeding flock are also vaccinated at the same time as the last hatch for LT.  Pox is vaccinated for on the Fourth of July week-end.  This gives plenty of time. for a withdrawl before being mixed with unvaccinated birds at our first show which is our local the last of September.

686
Ameraucana Marketplace / Pics of splash blue wheaten pullet please
« on: June 28, 2008, 01:51:12 PM »
Splash wheaten pullet on our place Dec. 2006.


687
Ameraucana Marketplace / Bad News
« on: June 24, 2008, 10:24:27 AM »
I was in our local feed store Monday, June 23, purchasing feed for our chickens and goats.  Presently feed is the highest that I can ever remember it being at harvest time.  The owner told me that next week it was going up $1.80 per bag (50 lbs.) across the board (meaning every kind of feed) due to the floods in the Corn Belt.
 
Now for some good news!  If you have space and like to grow plants-plant some watermelons!  Chickens love them and grow well on them!  We have a lot of them growing and are going to plant some more.  The chickens will get to the point when they see me carrying one, they will come running and wait for me to open it for them.  They will eat all except the thin outer rine.  It\'s a delicious treat for them, that didn\'t cost much to raise, which will help cut the feed price some.  Our growing birds are on self feeders and they are never allowed to get totally empty.

688
Ameraucana Marketplace / Large fowl wheaten/blue wheaten
« on: June 18, 2008, 11:29:16 PM »
Wheaten large fowl are a work in progress.  Thanks Jordan for your willingness to help.  I hope you will like Ameraucanas better than Wyndottes.
  Some wheatens have a problem with feather shanks and stubs.  Shank color of some don\'t change to be the required slate.  Some red is beginning to show up in the male\'s breast, but the black stripping in the hackles is decreasing.  Make sure the females have adequate black in their tail and the black on the underside of the neck on the males isn\'t broken by the red/orange.  I\'ve been told these two things lead to the problem of red in their breast.  Some may develop crooked toes or a lazy tail (they hold it to one side like a wry tail, then flip it over to the other side.  Some male\'s tail is too long which may be part of the cause of the lazy tail.  The egg color of wheatens usually fades to white too quickly (much sooner than blacks or blues).  Occassionally a chick will be cleaned faced (no muffs or beard).  Some wheatens are beginning to have problems with white in their earlobes.  Some females are too dark caused by the wild-e-gene (Mike wil have to explain).  Some occassionaly will be too small.  The wheaten LF were bred up from bantams, so there are still some small genes holding on to some of them.
  Wheatens are a real challenge to produce one capable of winning the show.  Last year we had the best blue wheaten pullet that has ever been raised on our place.  Her picture is on the North Central Dist. Meet,  National Meet-Great Falls, Montana and the South-Central District Meet all are on page six topics, at this time.
  I hope I didn\'t disencourage anyone who has a desire to breed show quality wheaten Ameraucanas from trying.  They are an experience like no other variety to raise.  The chicks of wheaten, blue wheaten and splash wheaten are all the same color at hatching.  They can be identified by variety within two weeks of age.  The wheaten chicks will have black, the blue wheaten will have blue and the splash wheaten will have white on their wing primaries.  Wheatens are sex-linked, so with time (about 4 weeks) the females will develop the creamy wheaten color (if they are correct and don\'t have the wild-e-gene) and the males will develop their color for their variety.  Their color changes several times from a chick to an adult ready to show.  The chicks start out with an off white shank and turn slate at about 3 months of age-so one has to be patient when breeding the Wheaten/Blue Wheaten Ameraucanas.  Several breeders agreed a few years ago to breed splash wheatens to get them a recognized variety.  It takes 5 breeders, 5 years of breeding, show 50 head at a designated show, have a recommendation from the judge, a lot of paper work, and a yes vote by the APA to get a variety recognized.

689
Ameraucana Marketplace / Another dumb newbie question
« on: May 23, 2008, 02:51:19 PM »
I would wait another 6 weeks and butcher the cockerels.  They are very good eating-Why waste it on the dog and teach them to kill chickens?

690
Ameraucana Marketplace / Ameraucana Breeding Stock
« on: May 08, 2008, 11:10:56 PM »
The past two days we have mailed over a tenth of our breeding flock in all four directions.  We still have more blues and blacks to offer.

It\'s not too late to get some chicks.  The last hatch of 2008 will be Monday May 12.  They will be mailed out on Tuesday May 13.

Pages: 1 ... 44 45 [46] 47 48 ... 58