Category
🐳
AnimalsTranscript
00:00 No, no, no, no, no. The chickens are your field. I'm here, you're the veterinarian part of the band. But this is your project.
00:07 Alright. Chicken wrangling. And it's already hot.
00:19 When I get my chicks, sometimes one of them is a male. And right now we have a rooster on the farm.
00:29 But you know, people don't realize that you don't need a rooster to have eggs.
00:33 Yeah, I'm not enough. I sell eggs, not chicks. So therefore, I do not need to catch chickens.
00:41 Let's catch your rooster first, and you're going to help me.
00:44 No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
00:45 The chickens are your field.
00:47 I'm here, you're the veterinarian part of the band.
00:50 But this is your project. We can't catch the rooster together, she's scared.
00:54 I'm not scared.
00:57 Oh, she is.
00:59 No. Wait a minute. I'm going to get the feed. If I can't catch it, she's going to hand it back at me.
01:06 They're going to go through the door.
01:10 Okay. Well, I'm not going to go in there, I'm just hanging out.
01:13 Jennifer!
01:14 The chickens are your project. I'll just manage the door for you.
01:18 They act like Jurassic Park creatures.
01:22 This is reserved for ladies. So, Mr. Rooster has to go.
01:26 We don't need roosters to have eggs.
01:29 And we don't need bulls to milk.
01:33 And we don't need men to feed our feet either.
01:36 If he pecks me or he grits me, it's your deal.
01:40 I'm not the best in the family to handle the chickens.
01:48 But I got him.
01:51 You see, Mrs. Veterinarian?
01:53 I told you you could do it. And it didn't take all day.
01:57 That rooster is actually going to go to a farm that keeps roosters and they rear their own babies.
02:02 So he'll actually be a daddy rooster.
02:05 Which coop would you like to go?
02:07 The first one over there.
02:09 So you're concerned about the rooster?
02:11 I'm not concerned about the rooster.
02:13 I'm just concerned about the rooster.
02:15 Which coop would you like to go?
02:17 The first one over there.
02:19 So you're concerned because those are older hens to be in?
02:21 They are. We need to know which ones are not.
02:24 Okay.
02:25 So if they're laying, they can stay.
02:27 But the older ones, they will retire.
02:30 This is our working farm.
02:32 I know, I know.
02:34 Now it's the chickens, the sheep, all of my girls' work.
02:38 You wouldn't let me just sit around at work with all the chickens?
02:41 That's true.
02:42 I'm not picky with my chickens.
02:44 There are two bones between the mint.
02:47 And if they're at least two to three spaces wide,
02:51 they're typically laying.
02:53 As they get older, those pin bones get closer together.
02:57 You can only fit one, maybe one and a half fingers.
03:01 Here, you hold it while I check.
03:03 Last year, I got a scratch on my face.
03:09 Got it?
03:12 She's laying.
03:14 Three fingers. She's laying.
03:16 Try one of them.
03:18 She's big.
03:19 She's not laying there. She's like a six-pounder.
03:22 No, she's not laying.
03:24 I bet she's not laying looking at herself.
03:29 Oh, she is.
03:31 Look at those hands.
03:33 She's not laying.
03:39 I'd rather just walk you outside.
03:41 I love starting the day by checking on the cloaks.
03:44 She's not laying. It's three.
03:46 You were right.
03:48 I don't like it.
03:49 They're old.
03:51 Here we go. Two at a time.
03:53 I don't know about this.
03:55 But you do. Just hold them.
03:57 Jennifer? Sharon?
03:59 She's not...
04:02 The bottom one is.
04:04 The other one is. It's five.
04:06 I need to go bop it.
04:09 Get her!
04:11 Oh, Jennifer! Salmon!
04:15 [Coyote howl]
04:18 [Coyote howl]
04:22 [Coyote howl]
04:25 [BLANK_AUDIO]