I've recently started building my first piece of hand made terrain. The idea was to make a sizable woodland piece that can be placed on the tabletop for wargaming. I did create 3 twisted wire trees and added some WS Clump-foliage on these trees to act as leaves.

I did also overspray the entire trees to make sure to keep the foliage in its place. Without success i can say.

I got some tips on watered down PVA/woodglue and spray it over. Also without success.


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Baby it is ccccold outside! Last night we got our first storm here in New England. So yesterday I cleaned the coop, filled up their food, cleaned their water out, and made a batch of homemade flock blocks!

The great thing about flock blocks is they are made of good stuff for the birds, easier than making cookies, they make your house smell great, and I get a sense of job-well-done because I made it myself.

Good Morning,

Was hoping for some advise I made this chicken block dividing it in half and it is not holding together its crumbly. My combinations must be off. What would you suggest I add to it to make it hold into a block.

Thank you

Brinda

I have a JavaScript application which posts messages to server. I have to gather those messages on server side and analyse them later, so I'm simply writing them to file. The problem is, when I open the file for reading, ie. in Notepad, messages are not being written. Since flock() is blocking and the locks should be mandatory on Windows, I expected the script to simply wait until I close the file and then save all pending messages, but it doesn't seem to work this way. Is there a way to make sure that all messages will finally be saved to the file, even if other process got exclusive access to it? I can't lose any message, even if someone opens the file for reading or copies it. Can I achieve it with PHP, or maybe I should rather send messages to database instead? PHP version is 7.0.4, my script looks like this: $f = fopen('log.csv', 'a+');flock($f, LOCK_EX);$text = date('Y-m-d H:i:s'). ";" .htmlspecialchars($_POST["message"]). PHP_EOL;clearstatcache();fwrite($f, $text);fflush($f);flock($f, LOCK_UN);fclose($f);?> phpflock Share Improve this question Follow asked Apr 14, 2016 at 22:43 user6206480user6206480 111 bronze badge  Add a comment | 1 Answer 1 Sorted by: Reset to default Highest score (default) Trending (recent votes count more) Date modified (newest first) Date created (oldest first) 0 flock returns true if successful or false if failed.

Today, though, technological innovations, from high-speed photography to computer simulations, have enabled biologists to view and analyze bird flocks as never before. So has a new wave of interest from other scientists, including mathematicians, physicists, even economists. As a result, researchers are closer than ever to really getting inside the mind of the flock.

By using software borrowed from the field of statistical mechanics, which explains properties of materials by examining their molecular structure, Cavagna and other physicists have now been able to match up to 2,600 starlings in different photographs with one another. That allows them to map the three-dimensional structure of flocks much more precisely than has ever been possible before. Onscreen, they can take what appears to the human eye as a solid, rounded mass of birds and learn whether it is in fact a ball or rather some other more complicated shape, such as a pancake, a column, or an open cup. They can view it from any angle, and watch it alter shape at 10 frames per second.

Shared with permission from Chickenlandia. Creation and recipe rights all belong to Welcome to Chickenlandia. Disclaimer Notice: The content of the Welcome to Chickenlandia YouTube Channel, website, blog, vlog, and all social media is for informational purposes only and is not intended to be a substitute for professional veterinarian advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Dependence on any information appearing on the Welcome to Chickenlandia YouTube Channel, website, blog, vlog, and social media sites is entirely at your own risk. Please do your own research and make your own informed decisions regarding the health of your chickens.

When one starling changes direction or speed, each of the other birds in the flock responds to the change, and they do so nearly simultaneously regardless of the size of the flock. In essence, information moves across the flock very quickly and with nearly no degradation. The researchers describe it as a high signal-to-noise ratio.

Last week, a new study on starling flocks appeared in the journal PLOS Computational Biology. The researchers, led by George Young at Princeton, did their own analysis of murmuration images to see how the birds adjust to their flockmates. They determined that starlings in large flocks consistently coordinate their movements with their seven nearest neighbors. They also found that the shape of the flock, rather than the size, has the largest effect on this number; seven seems optimal for the tightly connected flocks that starlings are known for.

The European or common starling, like many birds, forms groups called flocks when foraging for food or migrating. But a murmuration is different. This special kind of flock is named for the sound of a low murmur it makes from thousands of wingbeats and soft flight calls.

This dilution effect might be part of the reason murmurations happen: The more starlings in the flock, the lower the risk to any one bird of being the one that gets snagged by a predator. Predators are more likely to catch the nearest prey, so the swirling of a murmuration could happen as individual birds try to move toward the safer middle of the crowd. Scientists call this the selfish herd effect.

Murmurations have no leader and follow no plan. Instead, scientists believe movements are coordinated by starlings observing what others around them are doing. Birds in the middle can see through the flock on all sides to its edge and beyond. Somehow they keep track of how the flock is moving as a whole and adjust accordingly.

The videos reveal that the birds are not as densely packed as they might appear from the ground; there is room to maneuver. Starlings are closer to their side neighbors than those in front or behind. Starlings on the edge frequently move deeper into the flock.

Large schools of fish can appear to behave like murmurations, as do groups of some swarming insects, including honeybees. All these synchronized movements can happen so fast within flocks, herds, swarms and schools that some scientists once thought it required animal ESP!

The gist of it was to add chickens of about the same size, give them plenty of room (free ranging makes life easier), keep separated but visible to the existing flock for a few days if possible, and have multiple water and food sources to keep down squabbling.

Everyone will tell you not to add just one chicken to an existing flock. Once again, this can be more successful if you have a lot of space for the chickens to roam. Just one new face could possibly go unnoticed. The only drama may be at nighttime when they go to roost.

Enter Bernadette, the bantam cochin/Ayam Cemani mix. Bernie, as we call her, was added to the henhouse at night. Many recommend that method, however, once daylight comes, the flock notices the interloper.

Chickens are not accepting of random chickens on their turf. My flock was pretty mean to little Bernie, kind of like a fraternity hazing. Since we have a close (in distance and in interactions) relationship with our chickens, we were actually able to stop our mean girls at times. If you can believe it, a firm scolding worked many times.

We felt bad for Bernie, she did seem to be isolated from the rest of the flock and it seemed to take months before they were ok with her. However, Bernie could hold her own and was never physically hurt during the hazing.

For example, the most squabbling for my particular chickens is bedtime, when they are jockeying for position on the roost bars. The older girls peck and knock off the new ones, which is common with the pecking order for my flock. Bedtime always seems to bring on the most drama.

In the beginning, I would make sure the younger ones would have a spot on the roost bars, even if I had to place them on the roost bars myself. The new ones usually band together in the henhouse at night.

The key to the success of this recipe is to make sure the mixture is moist enough to stick together in the end without being too wet that it never hardens. This recipe makes two blocks, but it can easily be halved for smaller flocks or the second block stored in a cool, dry place until ready to use.

would this raise the protein in my flock ..i am having a time of it with the hens picking at the butt of my poor roo.hes a mess..and i read that raising protein would help ..i no it started as winter set in ..

I was "thinking" about make this but using up the bacon grease left over from our Xmas morning bacon treat. I probably have about 1/4 to 1/2 cup of bacon max and would use coconut oil for the balance. Will that much bacon grease hurt my 5 month old chickens? Or give them loose stools? Obviously I don't want to hurt them!! Thanks!

When travelling in groups, animals frequently have to make decisions on the direction of travel. These decisions can be based on consensus, when all individuals take part in the decision (i.e. democratic decision; social information), or leadership, when one member or a minority of members make the decision (i.e. despotic decision; personal information). Here we investigated whether decision-making on the navigation of small flocks is based on democratic or despotic decisions. Using individual and flock releases as the experimental approach, we compared the homing performances of homing pigeons that fly singly and in groups of three. Our findings show that although small groups were either governed (i.e. when individuals in the flock had age differences) or not (i.e. when individuals in the flock had the same age) by leaders, with concern to decision-making they were all ruled by democratic decisions. Moreover, the individual homing performances were not associated with leadership. Because true leaders did not assume right away the front position in the flock, we suggest that as in human groups, starting from a central position is more effective as it allows leaders to not only transmit their own information but also to average the tendencies of the other group members. Together, the results highlight the importance of democratic decisions in group decision-making. 2351a5e196

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