Está atualmente a visualizar o Portugal versão do sítio.
Gostaria de mudar para o seu sítio local?
Última edição

Practical Poultry Magazine No.123 Buying the Jersey Giant Edição anterior

English
10 Comentários   •  English   •   Family & Home (Animals & Pets)
We lost a bird recently; one of our small group of hybrid egg-producers. It’s always a sad event, especially in this case as she was the last of our white, Leghorn-based birds that have always proved such great performers for us. She was still a relatively young bird, and one of our most recent intake, so it was surprising when we noticed that her laying
performance started falling away for no apparent reason. To begin with we blamed the slight moult she was going through, the time of year, the appalling weather. But, as the rest of the flock got back into full swing, she didn’t. Her level of activity began to slow; she was less interested
in scratching around with the others and became progressively more withdrawn. Then once her tail dropped and she wound her neck in, we knew things were approaching the point of no return. One morning, soon after, I discovered her on her back in a nest box. She wasn’t in
the least bit distressed, but had simply lost the use of her legs, which were stretched out at odd angles. Fortunately, none of the other hens in that house had taken any notice of her vulnerability overnight, so she
didn’t suffer in that respect. It’s quite unusual for a mature hybrid hen to suffer this sort of Marek’s disease related fate for two reasons. For a start,
these commercially-produced birds are typically vaccinated against this sort of viral disease but, also, it’s a condition that most commonly affects very young birds, aged between eight and 20 weeks. I suppose it just goes to show that nothing can ever be taken for granted when you
keep chickens. This fact alone, of course, helps ensure that this hobby remains forever interesting, irrespective of your level of involvement.
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

No.123 Buying the Jersey Giant We lost a bird recently; one of our small group of hybrid egg-producers. It’s always a sad event, especially in this case as she was the last of our white, Leghorn-based birds that have always proved such great performers for us. She was still a relatively young bird, and one of our most recent intake, so it was surprising when we noticed that her laying performance started falling away for no apparent reason. To begin with we blamed the slight moult she was going through, the time of year, the appalling weather. But, as the rest of the flock got back into full swing, she didn’t. Her level of activity began to slow; she was less interested in scratching around with the others and became progressively more withdrawn. Then once her tail dropped and she wound her neck in, we knew things were approaching the point of no return. One morning, soon after, I discovered her on her back in a nest box. She wasn’t in the least bit distressed, but had simply lost the use of her legs, which were stretched out at odd angles. Fortunately, none of the other hens in that house had taken any notice of her vulnerability overnight, so she didn’t suffer in that respect. It’s quite unusual for a mature hybrid hen to suffer this sort of Marek’s disease related fate for two reasons. For a start, these commercially-produced birds are typically vaccinated against this sort of viral disease but, also, it’s a condition that most commonly affects very young birds, aged between eight and 20 weeks. I suppose it just goes to show that nothing can ever be taken for granted when you keep chickens. This fact alone, of course, helps ensure that this hobby remains forever interesting, irrespective of your level of involvement.


SELECCIONAR FORMATO:
Acesso imediato

Ofertas digitais disponíveis:

Edição digital única No.123 Buying the Jersey Giant
 
4,99 / issue
Disponível com
Pocketmags Plus
Assinatura de leitura ilimitada
 
Obter acesso ilimitado a Practical Poultry e mais de 600 outros grandes títulos. Renova em €11,99 / mês após 30 dias. Cancele a qualquer momento. Saiba mais
Esta edição e outras edições anteriores não estão incluídas numa Practical Poultry inscrição. As assinaturas incluem a edição regular mais recente e os novos números lançados durante sua assinatura e começam a partir de
Infelizmente, este título já não publica novas edições. Ainda é possível comprar edições anteriores ou ver outros títulos que possam interessar-lhe.
As poupanças são calculadas com base na compra comparável de edições únicas durante um período de subscrição anual e podem variar em relação aos montantes anunciados. Os cálculos destinam-se apenas a fins ilustrativos. As assinaturas digitais incluem a última edição e todas as edições regulares lançadas durante a sua assinatura, salvo indicação em contrário. O período escolhido será renovado automaticamente, exceto se for cancelado na área A minha conta até 24 horas antes do fim da assinatura atual.

Issue Cover

Practical Poultry  |  No.123 Buying the Jersey Giant  


We lost a bird recently; one of our small group of hybrid egg-producers. It’s always a sad event, especially in this case as she was the last of our white, Leghorn-based birds that have always proved such great performers for us. She was still a relatively young bird, and one of our most recent intake, so it was surprising when we noticed that her laying
performance started falling away for no apparent reason. To begin with we blamed the slight moult she was going through, the time of year, the appalling weather. But, as the rest of the flock got back into full swing, she didn’t. Her level of activity began to slow; she was less interested
in scratching around with the others and became progressively more withdrawn. Then once her tail dropped and she wound her neck in, we knew things were approaching the point of no return. One morning, soon after, I discovered her on her back in a nest box. She wasn’t in
the least bit distressed, but had simply lost the use of her legs, which were stretched out at odd angles. Fortunately, none of the other hens in that house had taken any notice of her vulnerability overnight, so she
didn’t suffer in that respect. It’s quite unusual for a mature hybrid hen to suffer this sort of Marek’s disease related fate for two reasons. For a start,
these commercially-produced birds are typically vaccinated against this sort of viral disease but, also, it’s a condition that most commonly affects very young birds, aged between eight and 20 weeks. I suppose it just goes to show that nothing can ever be taken for granted when you
keep chickens. This fact alone, of course, helps ensure that this hobby remains forever interesting, irrespective of your level of involvement.
ler mais ler menos
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

Como subscritor, receberá as seguintes vantagens


•  Um desconto no PVP da sua revista
•  A sua revista entregue no seu dispositivo todos os meses
•  Nunca perderá uma edição
•  Está protegido contra aumentos de preços que possam ocorrer no final do ano

Receberá 6 edições durante um ano Practical Poultry assinatura da revista.

Nota: As edições digitais não incluem os artigos de capa ou os suplementos que se encontram nos exemplares impressos.

Sua compra aqui no Pocketmags.com pode ser lida em qualquer uma das seguintes plataformas.


Pode ler aqui no sítio Web ou descarregar a aplicação para a sua plataforma, mas não se esqueça de iniciar sessão com o seu nome de utilizador e palavra-passe Pocketmags.

Apple Pocketmags Online Pocketmags Google Pocketmags
O aplicativo Pocketmags funciona em todos os dispositivos iPad e iPhone com iOS 13.0 ou superior, Android 8.0 ou superior e Fire Tablet (Gen 3) ou superior. Nosso leitor web funciona com qualquer navegador compatível com HTML5, para PC e Mac recomendamos Chrome ou Firefox.

Para iOS, recomendamos qualquer dispositivo que possa executar o iOS mais recente para melhor desempenho e estabilidade. Modelos anteriores com especificações mais baixas de processador e RAM podem apresentar renderização de página mais lenta e travamentos ocasionais de aplicativos que estão fora de nosso controle.
4,4
/5
Com base em 10 Comentários de clientes
5
6
4
2
3
2
2
0
1
0
Ver críticas

Great Features and Advice to Poultry Owners

Great Features and Advice to Poultry Owners Revisto 15 abril 2019

I love it

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

Great ap

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

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

Artigos desta edição


Segue-se uma seleção de artigos em Practical Poultry No.123 Buying the Jersey Giant.