Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - How to keep chickens alive in summer?

How to keep chickens alive in summer?

Look at the age first ~ the newly bought chicken ~ If the chicken has a small tail ~ It means at least 7 days ~ If not ~ The chicken can't stand on the concrete floor or other ground ~ Because it will freeze its claws ~ It is easy to die ~ The correct way is to put it in hard paper ~ Just pad it with paper ~ Pay attention to changing the paper often ~ Food: Put the rice in boiling water to soften it ~ Then sell the newborn chicken in the market in spring. Sometimes the heating stops (if you don't put the baby chicken in the nest, put the nest on the heating), you should pay attention to keep warm. You can feed corn batter (raw corn flour with water), and be careful not to be too thin. If there is only one chicken, don't let it go and play with it alone, but be careful not to fall in, and the nest should not be too short, lest it fly out and fall on its legs.

When the feathers grow, you can feed the vegetables. (Try to cut them into pieces at first) Chinese cabbage/Chinese cabbage can be mixed with corn flour.

If the weather permits, you can take it outside under the street lamp and eat bugs or ants by the grass.

After a month, you can feed it casually, such as noodles/vegetables/meat/porridge. But be careful, because chickens don't have teeth and the chickens at home don't have enough sand to eat. You can occasionally get some fine sand to feed it to help digestion.

Until summer, you can take it out every day and put it in the grass to choose your own food. Because he goes out every day, if you call his name, he will remember/hear it and won't get lost.

You can take a bath in two months. Note that the water temperature is 40-50 degrees higher than the human body temperature, because the chicken's body temperature is higher than the human body temperature. After washing, blow dry with a hair dryer. After a long time, you will fall in love with bathing.

Because staying indoors for a long time will make your nails very long, so you should trim them, but not too much to avoid bleeding.

My chicken was once pulled on the bed when I was a child, and I threw it on the ground on the spot. Since then, it has never been pulled on the bed. Even if you walk in bed, you will jump to the ground when you want to excrete. It is difficult to train a chicken to pull in a fixed place. If you want to fix it, it depends on your skill. Come on!