Not really. It would blow the chicken away first.
F5 is not a category used to rate hurricanes, only tornadoes. Category 5 is the strongest category used to rate hurricanes. Atlantic hurricanes. Records of older hurricanes may be incomplete The "Cuba" hurricane of 1924 The "Labor Day" hurricane of 1935 Hurricane Dog 1950 Hurricane Easy 1951 Hurricane Janet 1955 Hurricane Cleo 1958 Hurricane Donna 1960 Hurricane Ethel 1960 Hurricane Carla 1961 Hurricane Hattie 1961 Hurricane Beulah 1967 Hurricane Camille 1969 Hurricane Edith 1971 Hurricane Anita 1977 Hurricane David 1979 Hurricane Allen 1980 Hurricane Gilbert 1988 Hurricane Hugo 1989 Hurricane Andrew 1992 Hurricane Mitch 1998 Hurricane Isabel 2003 Hurricane Ivan 2004 Hurricane Emily Hurricane Katrina 2005 Hurricane Rita 2005 Hurricane Wilma 2005 Hurricane Dean 2007 Hurricane Felix 2007 Pacific Category 5 Hurricanes Hurricane Patsy 1959 Unnamed Hurricane 1959 Hurricane Ava 1976 Hurricane Emilia 1994 Hurricane Gilma 1994 Hurricane John 1994 Hurricane Guillermo 1997 Hurricane Linda 1997 Hurricane Elida 2002 Hurricane Hernan 2002 Hurricane Kenna 2002 Hurricane Ioke 2006 Hurricane Rick 2009 Hurricane Celia 2010
Australia calls a hurricane a cyclone. Cyclones, hurricanes, and typhoons are all names for the same weather phenomenon, but the term used depends on the region.
If you refer to the Great Flood of 1976, i seem to recall it was not a hurricane at all. 1st week of October I believe.
Many tropical cyclones and hurricanes have affected Louisiana, many of which occurred before 1950 - when tropical cyclones were first named. Though Hurricane Katrina - which is often the only hurricane most people know - devastated much of Louisiana in 2005, not many people know about the 1893 Cheniere Caminada hurricane, which killed at least 2,000 people and wiped the town with the same name off the map. Hurricane Audrey of 1957 also devastated areas of western Louisiana, killing at least 416 in the process.
Hurricane Hannah Hurricane Ike Hurricane Josephine Hurricane Katrina These are just a few. It would be impossible to list them all as there have been hundreds of hurricanes since naming started and even more unnamed before that. See the links below for some of the names, though on the first some of the names have yet to be used.
the average is 35 pounds.
both have feathers chicken lays a lot of eggs and sinosauropteryx don't and that is all I have
I'm sure it is not exploding, especially all the time. It would only take one explosion, and the chicken would be dead. However, the chicken could be molting. When a chicken molts, it loses many of its feathers in a short period of time. The chicken might look a little rough for a while, until the new feathers grow in. The feathers that dropped all over the coop may look like an explosion took place.
Any flightless bird - Ostrich, dodo, turkey, chicken, etc.
No, bread does not get its color from chicken feathers. Bread gets its color from the ingredients used, such as wheat flour, type of grains, and added ingredients like cocoa or food coloring. Chicken feathers are not used in the making of bread.
The phrase, "some days chickens, some days feathers" is a way to express how the world can change in the blink of an eye. One day it is good and the chicken is safe, and the next day the fox gets the chicken and all that is left are feathers. This means life can change, so live it wisely.
Feeding fonmertal will definitely help. Check with the store you buy your chicken feed at. They will have water soluble tonic for a vitamin boost. Your chickens are molting and all their energy is going into renewing feathers right now.
I'm pretty sure all male chickens (AKA Roosters or cockerels) have tail feathers. Actually, roosters are the pretty chickens with really really long tail feathers. If a male chicken is lacking tail feathers, they were probably pulled out by an outside source.
Well, cows really evolved from a chicken 300 b.c. They lost all there feathers and then there claws grew from their head. 100 yrs. later they got bigger.
There is a breed of chicken called SILKIE that have feathers that look like fur or hair. They come in all different colors including shades of brown and black.
If your chickens are housed with other chickens my guess is that the other chickens plucked the feathers. That's what happens to our chickens.
first you need to scald it, in order for the feathers to be loosened and the pluck it clean, then you must let the blood drain from it, then you must gut it ( get all the insides out) then season however u like and cook :)