3F Farms

3F Farms Utah Poultry Breeder NPIP UT-195
AKC Pembroke Welsh Corgis, Genetic/OFA tested
AKC Irish Wolfhound, Genetic/OFA tested
Hobby Farm
(2)

Well… Babe decided to go ahead and have her puppies yesterday evening, and thankfully she spared me from an all-night mi...
05/28/2026

Well… Babe decided to go ahead and have her puppies yesterday evening, and thankfully she spared me from an all-night midnight delivery shift. 😂

She delivered 6 puppies total. We are incredibly thankful to have 3 healthy, chunky, very active babies here doing well, 1 male and 2 females. Unfortunately, 3 of the puppies were born sleeping. It’s never the outcome you hope for, especially when you pour so much into these girls and these litters, but that’s also part of breeding that people don’t always see behind the scenes.

The puppies were all very large, and Babe worked hard bringing them into the world, but she is doing well and settling into mom mode beautifully. We are just soaking up the healthy babies we do have and giving everyone lots of rest and quiet today.

At this point we will only have ONE puppy available from this litter.

I’m also heavily leaning toward this being Babe’s final litter. We’ll see how she recovers and how she looks once puppies are weaned, but if you have ever wanted a Babe puppy or a Rooster x Babe puppy, this is likely the litter to watch. ❤️

Well… Babe decided to go ahead and have her puppies yesterday evening, and thankfully, she spared me from an all-night midnight delivery shift. 😂

I know I’ve been a little quiet on all fronts lately, so I figured I’d give a little farm update. 🐓🐾🐄Life has honestly j...
05/26/2026

I know I’ve been a little quiet on all fronts lately, so I figured I’d give a little farm update. 🐓🐾🐄

Life has honestly just been busy. We’ve been shipping cattle from our desert/winter ground up to summer pasture, and while that’s been going on, I’ve mostly been holding down the fort at home with the kids and trying to keep everything else moving forward here.

On the chicken side of things, I think I’m going to be downsizing some and taking a little breather this summer. After my big loss earlier this year, I just haven’t really had the motivation to jump back into heavy hatching yet, and honestly I think that’s okay. Sometimes you need a minute to regroup before jumping back in full force.

That said, show season is creeping up fast, so this week’s goal is sorting through birds and deciding who stays, who goes, and who’s making the cut for show season.

On the dog side, it’s been a mad dash getting everything cleaned up and summer-ready before the heat really hits. Kennels cleaned, yards redone, deep cleaning done, fans checked… all the behind-the-scenes stuff nobody really sees. 😂

And now we wait for Babe’s litter.

We’re officially in the “checking her every five minutes even though nothing is happening yet” stage.

I’m also currently updating a few things on the website, and if you’re on my email list, I’ll be sending out a bigger 3F Farms update soon with planned litters, farm updates, changes, and all the things happening around here.

So if you’re not already on the newsletter, now’s probably the time. You can join it at the bottom of the homepage on the website. ❤️

I’m hoping to get back into posting more regularly again because there’s honestly a lot happening around here, even if I haven’t shared much of it lately. Thanks for sticking around while life has been a little chaotic over here.

Official puppy count guess time 👀🐾Babe had her x-ray yesterday and we officially have a puppy pile in there 😂Now it’s yo...
05/22/2026

Official puppy count guess time 👀🐾

Babe had her x-ray yesterday and we officially have a puppy pile in there 😂

Now it’s your turn… drop your guesses below before delivery day and let’s see who’s closest 👀 ゚

Was this fella a cull from my program? Yes he was… I don’t love his wings and he has some gold leakage. But I’m in the s...
05/21/2026

Was this fella a cull from my program? Yes he was… I don’t love his wings and he has some gold leakage. But I’m in the season of working with what I got….

Okay, I need to know I’m not alone in this. 😂Lately, I’ve ordered quite a few shipped hatching eggs, and honestly… I am ...
05/20/2026

Okay, I need to know I’m not alone in this. 😂

Lately, I’ve ordered quite a few shipped hatching eggs, and honestly… I am constantly shocked at how carelessly some people package them. If I’m spending $100–$200 on hatching eggs, I better feel like that order mattered when it was packed. That is a LOT of money for most people.

Maybe this is an unpopular opinion, but as a customer, if you told me shipping materials cost a little extra because you individually wrapped eggs, double boxed, foam packed, added padding, etc… I would happily pay it. Every single time.

Personally, I take a ridiculous amount of pride in how I pack eggs. I want buyers opening that box thinking:
“Okay, wow… this breeder actually cared.”

Because at the end of the day, these aren’t Amazon socks. They’re fragile, living embryos traveling across the country, getting tossed around by carriers. Packaging matters. A LOT.

Also, apparently, I need to stop having breeder envy and keep my eyes in my own barn because at this rate, I’m just tossing bills out the window chasing eggs from other people. 💀😂

So in the spirit of “we can do better,” I want to hear your shipped hatching egg horror stories. 👀

I’ll go first:

I once ordered some pretty expensive Cornish eggs from a well-known breeder. I was SO excited. The box arrived and when I opened it… the eggs were literally sitting loose inside an egg carton in a Medium Flat Rate USPS box. No bubble wrap. No foam. No padding. 😭

You can imagine how they looked when they arrived.

The part that still shocks me to this day? The sender was genuinely surprised that they arrived broken.

Your turn. What’s the wildest shipped egg experience you’ve had? 🍿

I debated sharing this because I am honestly so upset and angry about the situation, but I think it’s an important remin...
05/15/2026

I debated sharing this because I am honestly so upset and angry about the situation, but I think it’s an important reminder as we head into summer.

At least here in Utah, we’ve already had days pushing into the 90s, and summer hasn’t even fully hit yet. It is HOT. Please, please do not leave your children or your pets in the back of a vehicle. Not for “just a minute.” Not while you run errands. Not because the air conditioner is running.

I recently sold a group of cull hens very cheaply. They were healthy birds, just birds I was moving out of my breeding program for color and other reasons. A gentleman picked them up and loaded them into a box in the back of his vehicle the air conditioning was running. It was snug, but everyone could stand and had air space. He lived only about 30 minutes away.

In my mind, common sense says you go straight home, unload the animals, get them settled, and THEN go do errands.

Instead, he reportedly left them in the vehicle while running errands and did not check on them. He claims the air conditioning was running. I don’t know. What I do know is every single bird died.

Heat kills fast. Especially in enclosed spaces. Especially when animals are stressed, confined, and unable to escape the heat.

Even with air conditioning, the back of vehicles can get dangerously warm if there are no direct vents or proper airflow. A box in the back of a vehicle in 90-degree weather is not safe.

I understand that accidents happen, but I am absolutely devastated for those birds and, because of this situation, I will not be doing business with this gentleman again.

This is your reminder as temperatures rise:
Do not leave kids in vehicles.
Do not leave pets in vehicles.
Do not leave livestock or poultry in vehicles.

Please think ahead. Be mindful. Use common sense and basic compassion. If you wouldn’t want to sit in the back of a hot car trapped in a box, neither do they.

It does not take long for heat to become deadly.

One of my favorites from yesterday! ❤️
05/14/2026

One of my favorites from yesterday! ❤️

Big news over here at 3F Farms… Fancy is officially bred! 🎉If all goes as planned, we are expecting a larger litter this...
05/12/2026

Big news over here at 3F Farms… Fancy is officially bred! 🎉

If all goes as planned, we are expecting a larger litter this round and I could not be more excited for these babies. We are anticipating mostly sable puppies similar to Fancy, with the possibility of both standard coat and fluffies in the litter. 🐾

05/07/2026

Unpopular Opinion: Breeder Credit

This might ruffle some feathers, but it needs to be said .. when you sell birds, chicks, or hatching eggs, you are selling the rights to those genetics.

Once those birds are bred forward, the direction and results of that work belong to the breeder doing the selecting, raising, and refining. They are the ones investing the time, growing birds out, conditioning, and culling. At that point, the line has already begun evolving beyond what was originally sold.

Yes, those original birds may have helped to shape the foundation, but after that first generation is hatched, the quality and success of the line are determined by the new breeder’s decisions. Their program becomes a reflection of their management - not the seller’s.

This is the reality of animal husbandry - the breeder matters just as much as the starting point.

A breeder can start with exceptional stock and ruin it through poor selection or lack of vision. On the other hand, a skilled breeder can take average stock and build something remarkable through years of disciplined decisions.

Too often, we see people leaning heavily on the names of reputable breeders they purchased from as a way to elevate themselves or market their stock. But simply owning birds from a respected program does not automatically mean those genetics are being maintained or improved.

Reputation is earned through consistent results and long term dedication to the craft. Buying good birds may open the door, but what a breeder does with them afterward is what truly defines the quality of their program.

This is also how breeds continue to improve. If every breeder were expected to remain permanently tied to the name behind their foundation stock, it would discourage independent development and create a gate keeping culture of ownership over genetics.

Good breeders should want to see the people they sell to succeed and contribute back to the breed.

If the concern is that someone might outbreed you, the answer isn’t control - it’s improvement.
Stay sharp, stay focused, and keep pushing your own program forward.

At the same time, giving credit where it is due is the respectable thing to do. It is right to acknowledge the people who laid the foundation or offered guidance - most breeders appreciate that recognition. But that appreciation should be voluntary; it should not be expected, demanded, or used as leverage.

Don’t hand over credit of years of your own hard work and discipline simply because someone sold you birds at the beginning. Where your program stands today is ultimately a direct reflection of your own ability as a breeder.

Foundations matter, but what you build on top of them matters even more.

Due to a few flock cancellations/reschedules, I currently have an extra bottle of PT antigen available that is set to ex...
05/06/2026

Due to a few flock cancellations/reschedules, I currently have an extra bottle of PT antigen available that is set to expire in July.

As many of you know, the smaller bottles have been difficult to find lately, so I am offering this to anyone who needs antigen for upcoming testing. The bottle has been properly temperature-controlled the entire time it has been in my possession.

Please note, at least here in Utah, purchasing antigen does NOT allow you to perform your own official NPIP/PT testing unless you are a state-certified tester. You would still need a certified tester to perform and submit the testing. For my out-of-state followers, NPIP requirements vary depending on your individual state regulations.

I can offer this bottle at a discounted rate compared to current availability. Shipping is possible, however this product must remain temperature controlled, so overnight shipping in an insulated cooler setup would be required.

If interested, please message me directly.

Address

Elberta Utah
Elberta, UT

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