The illustrated book of poultry : With practical scheduals for judging, constructed from actual analysis of the best modern decisions / by Lewis Wright.
- Lewis Wright
- Date:
- [1873]
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The illustrated book of poultry : With practical scheduals for judging, constructed from actual analysis of the best modern decisions / by Lewis Wright. Source: Wellcome Collection.
44/810 page 28
![poultrj^ it is true; but these men have spent their lives in studying the management of fowls, and what they find best for birds worth a score of pounds each will also be best for commoner fowls, such as can be bought for a few shillings. Therefore, we repeat, let the breakfast be mixed with boiling water, and ahvays given ivarin. How the soft meat is given will depend on circumstances. Supposing a yard to be tolerably dry and clean, and that the proprietor or his servant can spend a few minutes over the fowls, it will be best to scatter it freely over the ground. Properly mixed, very little dust or dirt will adhere to it, and every bird will get its share. But if the weather be very wet this will hardly do, neither will it if the birds are confined in the shed, floored as this is with loose dust or sand. In such cases any common dish will do to put the food in, the quantity which the fowls will eat with proper appetite having been found by previous observation. A large garden saucer will answer ; but if a dish can be procured with straight sides (as in the sketch Fig. li) it will be better, as the fowls cannot then turn it over when they step on the edges, as they arc apt to do with a dish wider at the top than the bottom: they cannot also rake the food out so readily with their beaks. The feeding “ cages ” usually sold arc too heavy, cumbersome, and expensive for general use ; but some years ago we gave in the “ Practical Poultry Keeper” the annexed engraving of a loose, light cover we had contrived, of zinc or tin and wire, for preventing the fowls from walking upon or scratching earth into their food, which has since been manufactured for general use, and will be found useful where they have to be altogether confined and fed upon a floor of dr}' rubbish, but for fowls fed with proper appetite in open yards, will not be needed. The front wires should be about eight inches in height. The best and most generally useful vessel for feeding poultry is one we first saw in the yard of ]\Ir. E. Jones, the celebrated Spanish breeder of Bristol, England, and was, we believe, his own contrivance ; so that we have always found it had to be specially made (which is readily done in quantities of a dozen) at the nearest pottery. These dishes arc circular in shape, and of the section represented, thus presenting a saucer at both top and bottom, the size being about eight inches For Food. Fig. 13- For Water. across, and five inches deep. If the wide face be placed on the ground, the saucer with upright sides contains the soft food (which cannot be scratched or raked out), stands perfectly firm and steady even if perched upon, and is sufficiently raised to prevent dirt being scattered into the food. When turned the other way it forms a water-vessel, also raised from the ground, and which, from the slanting sides, does not touch the combs of Spanish or other large-combed breeds, for which the ordinary poultry-fountain is not suitable on account of the size of that appendage. It was, in fact.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b28117207_0044.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


