77 X AGRICULTl A MANUAU L1BRARY' UNIVERSri ON CALIFORNIA ^POULTRY. PREPARED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE COMMISSIONER OF AGRICULTURE OF GEORGIA. G J. T. HENDERSON, COMMISSIONER. ATLANTA, GEORGIA: JAB P. HARRISON r speaks of their origin as follows : "This breed, in its different fami- lies, is cross-bred in foundation blood, with top-crosses of the Dom- inique to secure the color. To notice some of the modes which have produced these beautiful birds, we cite : "1. Black Spanish on White Cochin — top-crossed "with Domi- niques. "2. Black Spanish on Gray Dorkings — top-crossed with Domi- nique. "3. Dominique on Buff Cochin hens, reaching the result, through the strong breeding-color quality of the Dominique, by years of breeding. "4. White Birmingham on Black Java — top-crossed with Domi- nique. "5. White Birmingham on the Black Java, and the progeny bred together, the progeny coming white and black, and Dominique. These Dominique-colored birds, bred with the males produced by mating No. 4, produced the best and surest breeders for color of plumage and legs, and were known by many as the Essex strain, be- ing the same in foundation blood as seen in the so-called Mark Pit- man birds, of 1872-'3." MANUAL ON POULTRY. 23 It will be seen that in four of the five instances, black birds were crossed upon white, or light-colored ones, with similar results, after top-crossing with the Dominique. The Plymouth Hock cock is a showy bird ; beak and legs yellow, plumage bluish-gray, each feather having a penciling of darker color across it, comb, ear-lobes, faca and wattles, all red, comb small, single and erect. Ked or white feathers are not admissible in either cock or hen. The hen is marked like the cock, except that the plumage is darker in color. This is, at present, the most popular combination breed for eggs and table use. The cross of the Plymouth Rock cock on the common hen, pro- duces a marked improvement upon the latter. The chicks are hardy and mature, early. It is far more profitable, however, to breed the Plymouth Rocks pure, since after stock to start with are procured, they cost no more than the grades or common fowls, while the sale of eggs and stock birds is very profitable, at the prices which now prevail. BARN-YARD FOWLS. i The great bulk of the fowls cultivated in Georgia belong to no particular breed, though traces of improved breeds may be seen in many of them, as the effect of crosses of some of the thorough- breds. Indeed, grades of superior quality are often found among the poultry sent to our markets. Crosses of the cocks of the Asiatics, or those of other large breeds, upon the common dung-hill hens produce superior table fowls. The chicks are hardy and mature rapicfly. The continued use of the thoroughbred cocks will build up a yard of finefowls,but if the grade cocks are used, rapid deterioration takes place, the tendency being, in accordance with natural laws, to revert to the primitive inferior type. The present thoroughbred types of poultry are triumphs of the skill of breeders, just as are the Short-horn cattle and the Berkshire pigs of the present day, and constant, careful selection is .necessary to sustain the breeds in their purity, and to counteract the natural tendency to revert to the original type. 2± . DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE — GEORGIA. BANTAMS. These diminutive birds afford entertainment to the fancier, es- pecially if young. They make very interesting pets, and are good layers, sitters and mothers. While no one would select them solely on the ground of the profit to be derived from them except by the sale of birds to fanciers, yet on small lots they may be profitably grown and kept healthy where larger birds would not thrive. They are good egg producers and make very nice broilers. JAPANESE BANTAMS. When allowed a wide range on which they procure a variety of food, the broilers are almost as nice and but little larger than par- tridges. There is a number of varieties of this breed, all of which are very pretty — some are exceedingly handsome. The varieties differ but little in economic value, while they serve the purpose for which they are intended, viz : gratifying the taste of different fanciers. MANUAL ON POULTRY. 25 BEST BREEDS FOR GEORGIA. This is a very important question to those who propose devoting much attention to breeding poultry, either for market or for an abundant family supply of eggs and broilers for the private table, and one which has been quite definitely settled by the most pro- gressive and best informed breeders. The preponderance of evidence reported by correspondents is in favor of the Plymouth Rock as a combination fowl for the farm where only one breed is to be kept. The next in favor for general purposes is the Light Brahma. The verdict is almost unanimous in favor of the Leghorn for egg production, the preference being generally given to the brown variety. One of the most experienced breeders in the State, (Mr. Edgar Ross, of Bibb county,) after experimenting with the following varieties, viz.: Light Brahma, Dark Brahma, Buff, Partridge, White and Black Cochins, Plymouth Rocks, Houdan, Crevecoeur, LaFleche, Black Spanish, White and Brown Leghorn, Black, Silver-laced, Silver- spangled and Golden-spangled Hamburgs, Black-breasted Red, Derby and Brown-red Game,and Game, Black and Sebright Bantams, in answer to the following question : " Which variety has given the most satisfactory results as a combination fowl for eggs and table use?" says "Brown Loghorn, because they are excellent egg pro- ducers summer and winter, and the chicks mature rapidly, being ready for the table at ten weeks old — flash of excellent quality." In answer to the question, " Which has given the most satisfactory results as egg producers?" he says, " Leghorns. The White Leg- horns are as good layers as the Brown, but I prefer the latter on account of their color. They lay at five months' of age," As a table fowl he prefers the Light Brahma. In regard to crosses, he says : " I have made every conceivable cross with twenty odd varieties of thorough breds, besides crossing them on common stock." He reports as giving the most satisfac- tory results Leghorn on Light Brahma. In reply to the inquiry as to the respect in which the superiority of the cross consists, 'Mr. Ross says: "Brahrnas are excellent mothers and good egg producers. Leghorns surpass all other 26 DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE GEORGIA. varieties as layers, but are non-sitters. The cross possesses both qualities to perfection — loses the clumsiness of the Brahmas and inherits the activity of the Leghorn." There is no better authority on chickens in Georgia than Mr. Koss. He lets the small breeds roost in trees, and has had no dis- ease since adopting this plan. AMERICAN SEBRIGHT. Mr. F. N. Wilder, of Munroe county, has bred the Light Brahma, Dark Brahma, Brown Leghorn and Plymouth Rocks, and prefers decidedly the Light Brahma as a combination fowl. He says the Brown Leghorns lay the largest number of eggs, but the Light Brahmas more in weight. He thinks the Light Brahma unsurpassed as a table fowl. He says the cross of the brown Leghorn on the Light Brahma makes a superior egg producer and table fowl, but not reliable as sitters. His opinion in regard to the comparative weight of eggs produced by the Brown Leghorns and Light Brah- mas does not correspond witli the experience of others. The half- MANUAL ON POULTRY. 2T bred Leghorns have generally in other hands proved reliable sitters and good mothers. Mr. Wilder says: "The Light Brahmas- with me are very hardy, good layers, sitters and, mothers, and the eggs large and very rich. When well fed they mature early for the table. They are good winter layers, and often attain to a very large size." He says, " I have had no disease. I feed regularly, and always have fresh water accessible to them in dean earthen vessels, putting in a few drops of carbolic acid twice a week. I keep their quarters clean and free from vermin ; provide them with good dust baths, into which a little sulphur is occasionally sprinkled. Haul occasionally a load of cinders from the blacksmith's shop into their yards." Messrs. J. T. Scott & Ero., Crawfish Springs, in Walker county, Xorth Georgia, derive satisfactory results from some breeds not appro vec( by breeders farther south. They have bred the Dark Brahma, Light Brahma, Partridge Cochin, Buff Cochin, White Cochin, Brown Leghorn, White Leghorn, Plymouth Rocks, Black Hamburg?, Golden-spangled Hamburgs, Houdans, etc. The American Sebright is a new breed which promises well, but has not been sufficiently tested to justify more than a passing notice here. 28 DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE — GEORGIA. GENERAL MANAGEMENT OF THE FLOCK. The variety to be grown having been decided upon, the breeder should fully determine upon a definite system of management, and provide for housing, feeding, and otherwise caring for the birds in such manner as will insure success and profit. The variety to be grown should depend upon the surroundings of the breeder, as regards the extent of the range available. As a general rule all of the smaller birds require a liberal range for maximum production. The larger breeds, such as Cochins, Brah- mas, etc., thrive better with reasonable liberty, but suffer less from close confinement than the smaller varieties, such as the Leghorns, Games, etc. If it is necessary to confine the fowls to a contracted area the breeder must, as far as practicable, supply by artificial means the conditions of this natural range. Birds that have the liberty of a farm, supply themselves with three classes of food, and gravel, by means of which their food is prepared for digestion. They find on the natural range seeds of various kinds, a variety of green vegetable matter, and insects, the three together supplying for them bread, vegetables and meat. If the birds are deprived of making their own selection of these classes of food in a natural manner, by reason of confinement within lim- ited inclosures, they must be supplied by artificial means or the fowls will suffer from the privation, and be unprofitable to their owners. Generally there will be no practical limit to the range available for fowls on the farm, and hence it will be assumed that poultry have free access to grass or small grain throughout the year, and that, except during the winter, they will be able to secure a reasonable supply of meat in the form of insects. Daring the winter, scraps of meat from the table will supplement the short supply of insects. If there is not an abundant supply of perennial grass to which the fowls have daily access, small grain of some kind should be sown to supply pasturage for them during the fall, winter and early spring. MANUAL ON POULTRY. HOUSES AND SHEDS. Breeders of poultry in Georgia should not be induced to follow the practice of those in more northern climates in constructing- houses for the accommodation of their flocks. Here, where the mercury never reaches zero, and seldom falls below 20 degrees,, very close houses are neither necessary nor desirable. On the con. trary, close houses, in our warm climate, are often fruitful causes of disease and death among poultry that are required to occupy them. Let any one who is skeptical on this subject enter a close house in which a large number of poultry are roosting on a warm night and observe the foul air which the poor birds are compelled to breathe, and the correctness of the above statement will at once be recognized. Close barns, built after the pattern of those of the Northern State?, have been repeatedly tried in Georgia, and as often abandoned as unsuited to our climate. Close houses are no better suited to poultry than to cattle in warm climates. They may be used during the winter months to advantage if well ventilated, but the fowls should be excluded from them from May 1st to October 1st, and required to roost either in trees or open sheds. Thorough ventilation is absolutely necessary, even in winter, to prevent dis- ease. This should be provided for by a " lantern" rising above the centre of the roost, and provided on the sides with slats arranged after the manner of Venetian blinds, or by having the south side of the house, from within three or four feet of the floor to the top, closed in with one by three slats, leaving a space of one inch be- tween them. The roof should be sufficiently tight to perfectly pro- tect the interior of the house from rain, and the north, west and east sides so close as to exclude" cold winds. Fowls will suffer more during cold spells if confined in a house in which they are exposed to draughts of cold air than if roosting on trees where the whole body is exposed alike to the cold. This is illustrated by the inju- rious effects of a draught of cold air upon the person of a human being while sleeping. The roosts need not be more than thirty inches from the floor of the house, and eighteen inches from the wall, especially if the large breeds are kept. At eighteen inches from the floor place a shelf two feet wide, extending immediately under the roost. Dry earth, coal ashes or cotton seed should be 30 DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE GEORGIA. sprinkled over this shelf to catch the droppings, and to facilitate their collection, at intervals of two or three days. • The nests may be placed against the wall of the house, under this shelf, and thus be entirely protected from the droppings, and suf- ficiently secluded to suit the Jiens. The droppings can be very easily swept from this shelf, into a vessel placed under it, without defiling the floor. The dro-ppings should be removed two or three times a week and stored under shelter away from the fowl house. The floor of the house, if of dirt, should be filled two or three inches deep with dry sand, or clay, which should be dug up and removed once a year and replaced with fresh soil. Whether of dirt, cement or plank it should be occasionally sprinkled with diluted sulphuric acid to destroy all germs of 'disease which may have found a lodgment there. The sulphuric acid should be carefully handled to prevent injury to the clothing or persons of those applying it. The house should be thoroughly whitewashed twice a year to purify it, and to destroy insects injurious to the poultry. Crude petroleum, or, if this cannot be had, kerosene oil, sprinkled over the roosts and sides of the house, will be found beneficial in destroying the insects. Thorough fumigation with tobacco smoke while the fowls are confined in the house will prove efficacious. In order to secure the full benefit of this, however, the house must be made close enough to retain the smoke. Fowls are, however, far more healthy in our climate if required to roost in trees during the summer. Indeed, they will be more healthy if required to roost on trees throughout the year ; but will not produce so many eggs in winter as they will if kept during the cold months in comfortable houses. Nests, on which hens are expected to sit, should be made upon the ground rather than upon plamk. If made upon the latter it will be well to place upon the bottom of the nests a fresh sod be- fore setting the hens. Hollow out the sod in the- form in which the hen prepares it when left to her own instincts and make a nest of green cotton seed, preserving the same form. The green cotton seed are in some way offensive to mites and other insects injurious to fowls. Some years since an experiment was made with green cotton seed in nests by the side of others in which grass was used. While eggs in the latter were infested with mites daily for MANUAL ON POULTRY. 31 many days in succession those in the former were entirely exempt from them. After nests have once been used by sitting hens they should be thoroughly renovated. The material of which the nests were made should be entirely removed, and either burned or thrown into the manure pile. In addition to the house, there should be a shed with southern exposure, under which the fowls may shelter themselves from cold winds and rain. This shed should be provided with dust-baths of dry earth mixed with ashes into which flower of sulphur is occa- sionally sprinkled. The droppings of both animals and birds furnish a fruitful source of disease, hence the importance of extreme caution in removing promptly all droppings from the house and frequently using disin- fectants about the houses. This subject will be further treated under its appropriate head, and extracts from recent' scientific investigations given. INCUBATION, AND MANAGEMENT OF CHICKS. If practicable, sitting hens should have a separate apartment where they will not be disturbed by others seeking nests; but this can seldom be arranged on the farm. The next best arrangement is to provide woven wire gates, or doors, for the nests occupied by sitting hens, to prevent intrusion from others, and at the same time afford ample ventilation. With this arrangement it will be neces- sary to remove the hen once a day to take food. No inconvenience will arise from this if the hens are as gentle as they should be. It will not be necessary to keep the door of the nest closed regularly unless there are other hens disposed to intrude upon the sitters. It is well, however, to have ready a means of protecting them when necessary. Eggs should be marked when placed under the hens, in order that those laid after she commences to git may be readily distin- guished and promptly removed. The number of eggs to be put under a hen will depend upon the season of the year and the size of the hen.] [In winter, when the temperature is so low that the par- 32 DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE — GEORGIA. tial exposure of an egg would prove destructive of the chick, fifteen eggs are enough for a large hen and thirteen for a small one. Later in the season, when the thermometer ranges from 70° at night to 80C or 90° at noon, nineteen or twenty -one may he set under the hens of the larger breeds and fifteen under those of the small breeds. The eggs should be frequently examined, and if any have been broken those remaining should be carefully washed in milk-warm water, and, as promptly as possible, gently wiped and returned to the hen. If this is not done, the chicks will die in all of the eggs to which any considerable quantity of the contents of the broken ones has adhered. Whether this results from the stifling odor of the decaying eggs or from suffocation by closing the pores of the shells, is not known, but the fact is known to every experienced poultry raiser, though the remedy is seldom applied. If hens are set upon nests with plank bottoms it will be found advantageous to sprinkle the eggs with tepid water daily during the last week of the incubation. During very dry spells this will be found to be beneficial even when the nests have dirt bottoms, unless the hen seeks her food, while off, in grass, wet with dew. If nothing goes apparently wrong with the hen, it is best to dis- turb her as little as possible during her incubation. When hatching commences all that is necessary is to remove the shells that have hatched to prevent them from covering the pipped eggs and stifling the chicks. It will sometimes be necessary, if the hatching is con- tinued longer than twenty-four hours, to feed the hen to prevent her from leaving her nest before the hatching is completed. The best food for the young chicks, for the first few days, is hard boiled eggs, but very few will be willing to use eggs in this way. An excellent food for them is curds, or plain corn bread crumbled in buttermilk or clabber. Soft, sticky, raw dough should never be fed to young fowls, and is not proper food for adults. Wheat bran, or shorts, mixed with corn meal and not made too wet, or baked into bread, will be found suitable food for growing chicks and adults as a morning feed. If they have a liberal range, two meals a day will be sufficient, giving dry dough, or bread, in the morning, and grain of some kind just before they go to roost. If fed on meal at night it is so rapidly digested that the crop be- comes empty before morning, and the birds consequently suffer. MANUAL ON POLUTRY. 33 The food should be varied during each week by using different combinations of meal, shorts, bran, etc., for the morning meal, and the different grains for evening. It is a good plan to. sow plats of Egyptian wheat, Dourra corn, German millet, rural branching sorghum, or millo maize, sorghum cane, field peas and chufas, for pasturage. With such plats accessi- ble to the poultry no more feeding will be necessary than just enough to keep them gentle, and to collect them daily to be counted and examined. These crops will come into use in succession from July until mid-winter. The chufas will not be noticed by the poultry until all of the seed of the other plants have been con- sumed. After the tops of the chufas die down, a few bunches should be upturned to attract the attention of the chickens. When they once learn where to find them they will continue to scratch for them as long as a nut can be found. With these crops and small grain accessible to the fowls, very little feeding will be necessary, and the poultry will be more healthy than when they are abundantly fed at regular intervals without such range. Pure fresh water should be always accessible to the poultry in either iron, stone or earthenware vessels. If disinfectants or tonics are necessary they can be very easily and conveniently administered through the water. 3 DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE — GEORGIA. FOOD VALUES OF DIFFEEENT MATERIALS. The following table is copied from " Wright's Practical Poultry Keeper." THERE IS IN EVERY 100 POUNDS OF FLESH-FORM- ING FOOD. WARMTH-GIVING FOOD. BONE MAK ING FOOD. HUSK OR FIBRE WATER Gluten, etc. Fat or Oil. Starch, etc. Mineral substances. Oats 15 6 47 2 20 10 Oatmeal 18 6 63 2 2 9 Middlings 18 6 53 5 4 14 Wheat 12 3 70 2 1 12 ' Barley 11 2 60 2 14 11 Corn 11 8 65 1 5 10 Rice 7 a trace 80 a trace — 13 Beans and Peas 25 2 48 2 8 15 Milk ^ 3 5 t — 86f Commenting on this table Mr. -Wright says: "To show the practical use of this table, \t may be observed that whilst "mid- dlings," from its flesh-forming material, is one of the best summer ingredients, in winter it may be advantageous to change it for a portion of Indian meal. It is, however, necessary to avoid giving too great a proportion of maize, either as meal or corn, as the effect will be a useless and prejudicial fattening from the large quantity of oil it contains ; it is best mixed with barley or bean-meal, .and is then a most economical and useful food. Potatoes, also, from the large proportion of starch contained in them, are not good un- mixed as a regular diet for poultry ; but mixed with bran or meal will be found most conducive to condition and laying. "In mixing soft food, there is one general rule always to be ob- eerved ; it must be mixed rather dry, so that it will break if thrown upon the ground. There should never be enough water to cause the food to glisten in the light, or to make a sticky porridgy mass, which clings around the beaks of the fowls and gives them infinite annoyance, besides often causing diarrhoea. "If the weather be MANUAL ON POULTRY. 35 dry, and the birds are fed in a hard, gravelly yard, the food is just as well, or better, thrown on the ground/' If, however, such ground is not accessible, or if fed in a shed, a vessel protected by wire or slats driven around it to prevent them from walking over the food or scratching it out will be better. As before remarked, pure water is as important as good food. The water vessel should be so constructed that the fowls cannot scratch dirt into it. There are several forms of poultry fountains which answer well for this purpose. Tonics and disinfectants can be administered in the drinking water. On this subject Mr. Wright says : "It is well in winter to add to the water a few drops of a solution of sulphate of iron (green vitrol), jnst enough to give a slight mineral taste. This will in a great measure guard against roup, and act as a bracing tonic gen- erally. The rusty appearance the water will assume is quite imma- terial. The best plan, perhaps, is to keep a large bottle of the .celebrated "Douglas Mixture," respecting which we can speak with unqualified approval, as a most valuable addition to the drink in