Sie sehen gerade die Germany Version der Website.
Möchten Sie zu Ihrer lokalen Seite wechseln?
Neueste Ausgabe

Practical Poultry Magazine No.116 Glorious Eggs Zurück Ausgabe

English
10 Bewertungen   •  English   •   Family & Home (Animals & Pets)
I read a ‘news’ item on the internet the other day about a woman who’d decided to launch a sort of ‘bed & breakfast’ service for chickens. The idea was that she’d take in and look after hens while their
owners went away on holiday. There was some video footage supporting the story, showing the ‘hotel’ in all its muddy glory! Quite honestly, it didn’t look like the sort of place that I’d want to send a bird of mine, yet the inference was that the business was doing a roaring trade. The story flagged-up several warning signs as far as I’m concerned. We all know that chickens are creatures of habit. Back garden hens, especially, thrive on their daily routine and familiar surroundings.
Throwing them into an inexplicably different environment can cause no end of trouble and stress. And what does stress mean?... diseases! It lowers a bird’s resistance to infection, and coupling this
with the close proximity of other ‘guests’ with unknown health levels, can be a recipe for disaster.
Then there’s the responsibility angle. I know we bang-on about ‘commitment’ and ‘duty of care’ a lot in this magazine, but these truly are core requirements for anyone looking after livestock, including chickens. I think there’s something fundamentally wrong about farming-out your responsibility when it suits you. Keeping chickens properly is a serious business, and you are legally liable for the welfare of the birds in your care. While I’m not saying that none of us should never take a holiday, I do think it’s essential to put the well-being of your birds right up there at the top of your priority list. If you’re desperate to get away, then the best solution is to find a trusted, knowledgeable and, above all, reliable friend who can come in twice a day to see to the birds in your absence. If you can’t do that, then you should think twice about going away at all.
read more read less
Practical Poultry Preview Pages Practical Poultry Preview Pages Practical Poultry Preview Pages Practical Poultry Preview Pages Practical Poultry Preview Pages Practical Poultry Preview Pages Practical Poultry Preview Pages Practical Poultry Preview Pages

Practical Poultry

No.116 Glorious Eggs I read a ‘news’ item on the internet the other day about a woman who’d decided to launch a sort of ‘bed & breakfast’ service for chickens. The idea was that she’d take in and look after hens while their owners went away on holiday. There was some video footage supporting the story, showing the ‘hotel’ in all its muddy glory! Quite honestly, it didn’t look like the sort of place that I’d want to send a bird of mine, yet the inference was that the business was doing a roaring trade. The story flagged-up several warning signs as far as I’m concerned. We all know that chickens are creatures of habit. Back garden hens, especially, thrive on their daily routine and familiar surroundings. Throwing them into an inexplicably different environment can cause no end of trouble and stress. And what does stress mean?... diseases! It lowers a bird’s resistance to infection, and coupling this with the close proximity of other ‘guests’ with unknown health levels, can be a recipe for disaster. Then there’s the responsibility angle. I know we bang-on about ‘commitment’ and ‘duty of care’ a lot in this magazine, but these truly are core requirements for anyone looking after livestock, including chickens. I think there’s something fundamentally wrong about farming-out your responsibility when it suits you. Keeping chickens properly is a serious business, and you are legally liable for the welfare of the birds in your care. While I’m not saying that none of us should never take a holiday, I do think it’s essential to put the well-being of your birds right up there at the top of your priority list. If you’re desperate to get away, then the best solution is to find a trusted, knowledgeable and, above all, reliable friend who can come in twice a day to see to the birds in your absence. If you can’t do that, then you should think twice about going away at all.


FORMAT AUSWÄHLEN:
Sofortiger Zugang

Verfügbare digitale Angebote:

Einzelne digitale Back Issue No.116 Glorious Eggs
 
4,99 / issue
Verfügbar mit
Pocketmags Plus
Unbegrenztes Leseabonnement
 
€1.09
Erhalten Sie unbegrenzten Zugang zu Practical Poultry und mehr als 600 weitere großartige Titel. Verlängert um €11,99 / Monat nach 30 Tagen. Jederzeit kündbar. Weitere Informationen
Diese Ausgabe und andere ältere Ausgaben sind nicht in einem Practical Poultry Abonnement. Das Abonnement enthält die letzte reguläre Ausgabe und die während des Abonnements erscheinenden neuen Ausgaben und ist bereits ab einem Betrag von
Leider werden von diesem Titel keine neuen Ausgaben mehr veröffentlicht. Sie können immer noch ältere Ausgaben kaufen, oder scrollen Sie nach unten, um andere Titel zu sehen, die Sie interessieren könnten.
Die Ersparnisse werden auf der Grundlage eines vergleichbaren Kaufs von Einzelausgaben über einen annualisierten Abonnementzeitraum berechnet und können von den angegebenen Beträgen abweichen. Die Berechnungen dienen nur zu Illustrationszwecken. Digitale Abonnements beinhalten die letzte Ausgabe und alle regulären Ausgaben, die während Ihres Abonnements erscheinen, sofern nicht anders angegeben. Das von Ihnen gewählte Abonnement verlängert sich automatisch, wenn es nicht bis zu 24 Stunden vor Ablauf des laufenden Abonnements im Bereich Mein Konto gekündigt wird.

Practical Poultry issue No.116 Glorious Eggs

Practical Poultry  |  No.116 Glorious Eggs  


I read a ‘news’ item on the internet the other day about a woman who’d decided to launch a sort of ‘bed & breakfast’ service for chickens. The idea was that she’d take in and look after hens while their
owners went away on holiday. There was some video footage supporting the story, showing the ‘hotel’ in all its muddy glory! Quite honestly, it didn’t look like the sort of place that I’d want to send a bird of mine, yet the inference was that the business was doing a roaring trade. The story flagged-up several warning signs as far as I’m concerned. We all know that chickens are creatures of habit. Back garden hens, especially, thrive on their daily routine and familiar surroundings.
Throwing them into an inexplicably different environment can cause no end of trouble and stress. And what does stress mean?... diseases! It lowers a bird’s resistance to infection, and coupling this
with the close proximity of other ‘guests’ with unknown health levels, can be a recipe for disaster.
Then there’s the responsibility angle. I know we bang-on about ‘commitment’ and ‘duty of care’ a lot in this magazine, but these truly are core requirements for anyone looking after livestock, including chickens. I think there’s something fundamentally wrong about farming-out your responsibility when it suits you. Keeping chickens properly is a serious business, and you are legally liable for the welfare of the birds in your care. While I’m not saying that none of us should never take a holiday, I do think it’s essential to put the well-being of your birds right up there at the top of your priority list. If you’re desperate to get away, then the best solution is to find a trusted, knowledgeable and, above all, reliable friend who can come in twice a day to see to the birds in your absence. If you can’t do that, then you should think twice about going away at all.
mehr lesen weniger lesen
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.

Kelsey Publishing

Als Abonnent erhalten Sie die folgenden Vorteile:


•  Ein Rabatt auf den UVP Ihrer Zeitschrift
•  Neue Ausgaben werden am Erscheinungstag auf Ihr Gerät geliefert
•  Sie werden keine Ausgabe verpassen
•  Sie sind vor Preiserhöhungen geschützt, die später im Jahr eintreten können

Sie erhalten 6 Ausgaben während eines 1-Jahres Practical Poultry Zeitschriftenabonnement.

Hinweis: Die digitalen Ausgaben enthalten nicht die in den gedruckten Exemplaren enthaltenen Umschlagseiten oder Beilagen.

Ihr Kauf hier bei Pocketmags.com kann auf jeder der folgenden Plattformen gelesen werden.


Sie können hier auf der Website lesen oder die App für Ihre Plattform herunterladen. Vergessen Sie nicht, sich mit Ihrem Pocketmags-Benutzernamen und Passwort anzumelden.

Apple Pocketmags Online Pocketmags Google Pocketmags
Die Pocketmags App läuft auf allen iPad und iPhone Geräten mit iOS 13.0 oder höher, Android 8.0 oder höher und Fire Tablet (Gen 3) oder höher. Unser Webreader funktioniert mit jedem HTML5-kompatiblen Browser, für PC und Mac empfehlen wir Chrome oder Firefox.

Für iOS empfehlen wir jedes Gerät, auf dem das neueste iOS für bessere Leistung und Stabilität läuft. Bei älteren Modellen mit niedrigeren Prozessor- und RAM-Spezifikationen kann es zu einer langsameren Seitenwiedergabe und gelegentlichen App-Abstürzen kommen, die außerhalb unserer Kontrolle liegen.
4,4
/5
Basierend auf 10 Kundenrezensionen
5
6
4
2
3
2
2
0
1
0
Rezensionen ansehen

Great Features and Advice to Poultry Owners

Great Features and Advice to Poultry Owners Überprüft 15 April 2019

I love it

Such good photos and interesting features, I love it when the new issue arrives Überprüft 16 Juli 2013

Great ap

Would be 5 stars but my credits dissapeared and i paid for 6 issues and only got 2 Überprüft 24 November 2012

Reading this mag gives me enormous pleasure. The layout is excellent and the articles are very informative. A brilliant read. Überprüft 01 Juni 2012

Artikel in dieser Ausgabe


Im Folgenden finden Sie eine Auswahl von Artikeln aus Practical Poultry No.116 Glorious Eggs.

Chat
X
Pocketmags Unterstützung