Tag Archive for 'chickens'

What we’ve been up to-

summer-08-222.jpg

Hazel got some clay for her birthday before we went to MI and she and the boys have spent most of the last week playing with it. This picture shows the first creation, the colors are all mixed up and muddy now but they are still really into it.

summer-08-226.jpg

I got this amazing stash from someone on freecycle - she said she used to work at a fabric store and spent most of her paycheck there. Now she has more fabric than she’ll ever use and is cutting back. It might not look like that much in the picture , but there are 300+ 1/4 yard pieces of fabric there! Today she posted again and Scott went over and picked up a box of ribbon that should last me the rest of my life.

summer-08-227.jpg

The 25th was our 14 year wedding anniversary so we went to goodwill where we found this great couch and then to Lowe’s to buy chicken wire. (I think that those are the traditional 14th anniversary gifts right? Used furniture and poultry supplies? LOL!) Anyway, this couch is so comfortable and well proportioned and it didn’t smell. . . but seriously, it is my ideal couch other than the colors. So at some point I’m going to attempt to re-upholster it. I’ve dissected a couch before, so I feel like I have some idea of what is involved, but I don’t think this particular couch is a first-timer’s project. So for practice I’m re-covering the old couch, which was really a loveseat , which is now on the boys’ room. I’m about 1/2 done with that, pictures will be posted when I’m all done, so far it is going well.

The boys were so excited about having the old couch in their room. Ray said, “Now if we just had hatchets and a TV in our room we’d have everything we ever wanted!” (Scott read them Hatchet by Gary Paulsen recently and they’ve been obsessed with having one ever since. Yes, they will be getting hatchets at some point, but no they won’t be getting a TV in their room.)

summer-08-260.jpg

This is what the chicken wire was for. Every summer I read a book that convinces me that our chickens need to be in movable coops and not in their big hoophouse - the hoophouse is fine, but ideally they’d be scratching on grass and digging up bugs.( Two years ago the book was The Omnivore’s Dilemna, last year it was Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, this year it was You Can Farm.) Every summer I come up with a plan for a movable coop and it is usually better than the year before, but then a couple chickens get killed and we move them back into the hoophouse. Ideal is one thing, alive is another. We have persistent and smart predators around here, along with very uneven ground, so a movable coop has to be flexible enough to be secured to the ground.

This one is made of two layers of wire - concrete reinforcing wire for structure and chicken wire for security. A third type of wire was used on the sides but next time I’m going to stick with the first two. 7 of our 22 chickens are testing this model for us, I really think they’ll be safe because I spent 4 days wrestling with wires to make it impenetrable.

summer-08-255.jpg

And I spent some time reviewing Scott’s life insurance policy. Just kidding - there were a bunch of branches from this 100 year old pecan tree that were touching our roof so Scott did some pruning.

Chicken news-

One of my most favorite times of the year is when I get my chick list. The feed store puts out a list of the chicks they are ordering and when they’ll be in. Might not be thrilling to everyone, but I love to see what new breeds I could add to my flock. It hangs on the refrigerator while I do my research, then the appropriate information is entered on my calender.

fall-07-473.jpg

Meanwhile inside the refrigerator -

fall-07-475.jpg

The 14 chickens we have already are laying about 9 eggs a day. This is just the overflow - I have a different spot for our usual supply.

And even more birds-

My friend Claudia brought me some banty chickens yesterday. They are fully grown but about 1/3 the size of our regular chickens. They are supposed to be really good parents - our regular chickens don’t have the nesting instinct, so even though we have a rooster (so our chickens lay fertilized eggs) our chickens will never raise chicks. The banty hens will get broody and sit on their eggs and supposedly they don’t notice if you sneak a couple full sized eggs in the nest.

fall-07-323.jpg

I left them in the cage she brought them in for most of the day and put it in the chicken coop so they could get used to each other a bit but not get to each other. When I fed the bantys the big chickens were all very interested.

fall-07-317.jpg

Here you can see the size of the bantys - that is two hens standing next to each other and the rooster has the brown stripe and red neck. He has a tiny voice - compared to the big rooster - so his crow is pretty funny.

fall-07-325.jpg

One of the cats was interested in what was going on when I finally let the two groups mix. Chickens establish their “pecking order” with little fights - it is really more like a staring contest to see who will look away first - but there is some pecking and clawing along with the bravado. Banty roosters don’t seem to notice that the other chickens are 3X bigger - this one was taking on anyone he came across.

These banty hens have not started laying eggs yet, but Claudia says their eggs are the perfect size for egg-in-a-nest or a biscuit. And yes - they are just the same as regular chicken eggs, just small.

Awwww-

Awwww-


Baby chicks are so cute.
Hazel was sitting there telling all me about how the chicks are doing yoga and showing me the poses.