A New Nestbox!

Well, look what I made!  A lovely three hen nest box!  All by myself!  Pretty nifty, if I don’t say so myself!

We needed a more formal nestbox in the little coop.  For whatever reason, the little goofs don’t like to lay in my lovely chest of door boxes, but roost in them.  We are just not getting very many eggs from that coop, and we should be, there are at least 10 hens in there that are old enough or old…  but are not laying.

I suspect it’s the recent addition of a lot of young pullets and such, but still, I wonder if it’s a lack of decent little nest boxes.  So, I raided our lumber pile and found two nice boards from an old garage sale desk that fell apart and a nice board I got for some project in the spring and never used!  Perfect!

And I cut all the wood and nailed it all together.  I tell you, the more you build stuff and work with tools, the easier it gets.

Maggie did help me hang it on the wall, because it was rather heavy and that first couple nails were a bit of a challenge.

But I think it’s pretty nifty.  I hope the ladies like it.  A couple pullets were very very interested in it right away.

Time will tell!

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Fall Photos…

I love when we put down some fresh straw in the poultry yards.  Everyone goes nuts scratching and digging and pushing it all over, looking for goodies underneath.  I try and sprinkle a little cracked corn all over the yard for them, so that the crazy activity gets a little reward.  Chickens are so much fun to watch and mess with their little minds.  What is nice if the straw gets a little wet and yucky, then the bugs and worms come up into the wet layer and it’s chicken pickin’ feast time!  I think it’s important to give your animals a little brain candy as well as good basic care.  It makes them less likely to pick on each other or do bad things like try to escape and such.

 

Little Cody man is getting shaggy!  I didn’t really notice it until this photo and then I thought, oh my gosh!  Shaggy little wild man!  He is really darn cute in the winter when he gets his long wild stallion of the moors coat.  It makes him look like a little bear cub, all fuzzy and stout.  I especially like his little legs, they get all feathery and cute like a little gypsy horse.

 

The raking season is upon us…  and we have been trying a new plan this year.  Rather than let everything fall and then rake up giant huge piles of leaves, we have been working areas every few days.  It’s a whole lot easier to deal with smaller, lighter piles, than the big wet yucky piles!  Still, it’s a good deal of work.  Maybe someday we will consider one of those gas powered leaf blowers.  But not this year.  Actually, we are having some really serious wind today, up to 25 mph and those gusts are doing a really good job of blowing the leaves into little catch areas.  I like that!  Super easy that way.

 

This is our second successful broody hen… Miss Lizzy.  She is a cuckoo Marans from a trio of hens we call Izzy, Lizzy and Dizzy.  Well, Lizzy has tried unsuccessfully a few times to hatch some chicks.  Usually, she will sit for a week or ten days at the most and then abandons the nest.  So we have been taking eggs from her now, anytime she tries to brood a clutch.  But we felt bad for her and gave her another shot.  And she did it!!   She hatched out two sweet little chicks.

Sadly, one of them drowned yesterday, during a very wet stormy day.  Somehow the little fella fell into Gideon’s water trough.  I don’t have a clue how he even got up there, so little as he was, but he did and fell in.  We were so sad!!!  We are going to be on the lookout for a couple of big rocks to set into a few troughs, I have since learned that you can do this and it will give an animal a chance to at least get up on the rock, and wait to be rescued.  Every so often we find little mice that fall in, and die.  I’m so sorry for Lizzy, because she has been such a proud mom.  I guess her little last chick is going to be super spoiled!!!

 

This is Blue Louie.  He’s a roo that we hatched here at the farm, and then he went to live with some friends, as we thought he was a girl!  Well, turns out, he’s not.  And he’s huge.  We are pretty sure he’s a son of Miss Bionca, our splash Jersey Giant hen and Bucka ROo.  He’s super sweet and gentle, and since we really didn’t have a good spot for him in a coop collection, we decided to see how he would fit with Bucka and Copper, out in the free range group.   Well, he’s doing fantastic!  Because of his gentle demeanor, he stays far away from the head boys and doesn’t fight at all.  He likes to follow you around and is really pretty fun to have as a companion as you do chores and such.  He has a few of the ladies that swoon over his handsome and rugged good looks.  He is the largest chicken we have here!

 

Bucka has a stalker friend.   This little silver laced wyandotte is ALWAYS on his tail.  She always follows him everywhere and is just in love.  She is one of our friend’s little retirement chickens that came to live at the farm this spring.  Bucka doesn’t seem to mind and they are always found walking about the place.  She will follow him forever all over the yard and on his travels.

 

Pony feels left out because he doesn’t have an ITouch….

 

Still life with Momma sheep, Bionca hen and some evil nut balls.  Oh yeah and wood pile.

 

Carolyn and her peeps are doing so good!   She managed to get them grown up without any mishaps.  And in fact, she even kind of ignores them pretty much, though they follow her around a good deal still.  It’s not uncommon to see her hanging with Bucka and his peeps and the two babies are out on their own journey.  Pretty sure that at least one is a hen,  and probably the other is as well.  They are probably some Amerucana mix with a blue Marans hen.  Probably Bucka, or well, could be Copper too.  I’m glad we gave her a chance to raise them on her own.  It’s sad now, that Lizzy has lost a chick to accident, but well, I still think it’s probably better for the hens to raise their chicks if they manage to hatch some.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Chicken are doing very nicely in their courtyard coop.  It’s actually Parsley and Sage, my two little mille fluer banty chickens in this little coop.  I had two other porcelain hens, but I gave them to a young lady that was doing 4H with the mille fluers and just fell in love with them.  Her family came to buy some chicks and when she saw the procelain hens, she was so excited.  She had one that had died and had a few of the brown ones, like I love, but wanted to get a trio together to show…  they offered to buy them but I had gotten them as a gift and I wanted to keep that good thing going, so I gifted them to her.  It works out nicely because now I just have the pair and they are so cute and devoted to each other.  We call them Mr. and Mrs. Chicken because they are always together and are very bonded.   We let them out in the courtyard to wander a bit in the afternoon and they are so cute to watch as they waddle about.   Jessy took some cute pictures of them today, I will try and get them up here soon!

 

Ugh…. Evil Nut Balls.  Or ENBs as we call them.   From our black walnut.

I know some folks love black walnuts but these are just so evil.  They have bugs and they are hard and just are all over the place.   I would SO love to sell that tree.  Seems like all we’ve been doing is picking up ENBs….  We have been dumping them over the fence in the hedge and all because we have asked but no one wants them.  Around here, there are a lot of these black walnuts and people consider them a nuisance tree.  I am seeing why!

Now, our English walnut, we adore!   And we’ve been picking up those and saving them by the pound!   We have a whole 5 gallon pail full already and a bunch more to gather.  They have to cure for about a month and then we will be shelling them and freezing them!  Yum!   Can’t wait for banana bread and nut bread and blueberry nut bread and candied walnuts…. and salty walnuts…..  yum…..

 

Just a pretty picture…  so nice and green is our grass!  It’s finally starting to recover a bit from the drought this summer.

 

Thought this was funny…  been training the sheep to come when they are called.  And buddy, they have it down good.  In fact, they come when you call anything, really.  I call the chickens and they come running.  I started out by giving them treats whenever I called.  Every single time.   Then after they got that down good, I started to skip a time, call but no treats.  And then I made it every few times…  pretty soon, I really don’t have to treat much, and they will still always come on the off chance there is goodies to be had.  I think it’s really important…  if they are scattered about the farm and I want to check on them, I can just call from the screen porch, even in my jammies and they will come for a head count.  And if they ever get out, they will come when I call them instead of chasing them all over the place!  Very important!!!  Cody usually comes as well, but I think he was napping in the barn at the time!

 

The wood lot is looking so pretty…. it’s that time of the year when everything starts to turn so pretty.  I love this time, it’s a nice restful time and a chance to get your batteries charged for the cold winter to come.  I feel good that we have gotten a ton accomplished this year…  it’s gotten better and better every week!  Soon the pigs will be gone, and we will hunker down for some rest and relaxation…  and some indoor projects and crafts and of course, reading and some serious napping!!!   i think we’ve deserved a little down time.  It’s been a fantastic warm season and we’re thrilled at the progress on our little farmette!!!

 

The crab apples are all gone and the sheepies are sad.  It was one of their most favorite times of the day, the apple shower day!  If you go near those two trees, the flock will run over and wait anxiously for you to shake a limb and give them little sour pucker apples to munch on.  Isn’t Angus the fattest little boy around!   He looks pregnant… but he’s not.  He’s just rotund.  He gets a lot of treats because he’s so friendly!  We have to watch that he doesn’t get too many!  (He’s the one on the right hand side closest to Jessy.)

We are pretty much plum full up with pullets and hens at the moment.  These are a few of some lovely six hens that a friend brought to us.  She is going to be vacationing this winter and didn’t have a real good winter coop setup, so she asked if we would take in her hens.  They are beautiful girls, three are white and three are red.   But the white ones are very pretty, they have a blush of red faint feathering on their chests!  Very friendly birds, one lady escaped and she let me just pick her up and pop her back in the run!  I like hens that don’t mind being touched and picked up!  It’s so nice!

Our 50 pullet chicks we bought in the summer are doing well, they are getting to be young teenagers now.  They have moved to big girl flocks in the lil’ coop and the poultry barn, but once the hogs go on to their final destination, we will be converting half of the big barn over to a pullet teen center.  We think we might have a few too many birds in each coop group as they are not laying very well.  Too much competition I believe for roosting, feed and all that.  We will probably take about 15 birds from each coop and winter them in the big barn with the free range flock.  They won’t be laying until January or February at best, so it will be a good way to keep an eye on them and give the other areas a little break from too many chicks!  We really need to get our egg production up…  we have close to 100 hens now and are only getting about a dozen eggs a day!!!  I know that it’s a seasonal thing, and that well over half  of them are young still, ranging from 7 to 3 months in age.  We will be putting up some inside lights soon, to help give them a little more light which can occasionally help with egg production.  And a lot of the hens are molting…  so it’s like a triple whammy for egg deliveries!!!   Soon, though we should be back in the high egg production!  We can only hope!!!

All in all, just a nice time we’re having, this lovely fall weather is nice.  Everyone is getting ready for a nice winter and we hope this one will be much easier than the last.  Our nice warm furnace is keeping away the chills and that will be a huge relief!  And we are getting much better at our chores and how to manage the livestock, so that makes things even easier.  And we know what we are up against now and can prepare a little better.  I hope we have a lovely nice productive yet relaxing winter season to come!

 

 

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Their time is coming soon….

 

Our little piggies are now hogs.  Big, 200+ pound hogs.  Hershey is probably close to 300.  He’s getting there.  250 easily.

The others are not far behind him.  They have consumed over 2,200 pounds of food, these four hogs of ours.  They are easily 4 feet long and stout fellas.  They can eat 100 pounds of food in a day right now.  They are a handful to manage, but still pretty nice and love a good head scratch.

I like that they still romp and frolic in their huge pen, and get darn right excited with the wheelbarrow of chow shows up.  They like to be sprayed with the hose.  And they totally enjoy garden goodies which they have gotten a good deal of lately, since there was a killing frost a few nights running.

But I know Maggie is getting a little weary of their ramped up care schedule.  She is the one that primarily lugs the 50 pound bags back to the barn and has to roll up her pants to wade into the muddy muck to get the big heavy feeder that they routinely knock over.  She is the one that they try to suck on her coat or hoodie, and she has to be very careful around when the nearly thousand pounds of hog want to give her snuffles all over if she comes into their space.  They are no longer the cute little piglets of the spring, or even the teenager piggies of the summer.  They are the hogs of fall and are due soon to be the pork of winter in our freezer.

I’m calling Monday to get their date for finishing school.  I’m hoping it will be within the next fortnight.  It will make our cold season chores much, much easier for certain.

I’ll miss them, but I know for sure they have had a wonderful life.  And we’ve learned a lot about raising hogs.  I’m quite certain that come spring, our barn will have another set of piglets but I do know we’ll be even better equipped to make their lives even better.  And a little easier on Maggie.   We want to build a super heavy, solid concrete feed bunker for them.   Something that they just can’t knock over, no matter what.  And that can be filled from outside of the pen.  And we need a much better system for watering them.  Maggie is hauling water out to them twice a day and that’s a lot of work.  Over the winter, we’ll be thinking, planning and getting ready for a much easier routine for raising our hogs.  It’s all a learning process and I’m so happy that we’ve done well with this first batch.

Would we want to raise more?  No.  In fact, we will probably just raise a pair for our own needs and a few close friends and family.  Maybe three.  We’ll see how it goes.  I know we have lots of folks that would love for us to raise more, but it’s hard work with too many, especially towards the end.  And we’re not set up for some huge operation.  But I do know, we will always raise a couple each year for our own needs.   It’s just so much more rewarding and a good thing.  Fairly easy as well.  The first four months were really a breeze.  This last 2 months has been a lot more work for certain.

This year, aside from eating out and the occasional prepared food product from the grocery store, we have only eaten our own chickens and pork all year!  Now, we are out of pork at this point, Sir Loin is but a memory at this point.  We just had the last bit of ham from him, for dinner tonight.  It will probably be three weeks to a month before our new pork is ready for the table.  Part of me will probably want to wait it out. Maybe just get a little bacon or maybe just a bit of sausage from the local butchers.  We’ll see how it goes.  I feel good that we’re moving away from the factory farmed meats and have our own animals for our table.  We’ll probably be ordering meat chickens again real soon, as we are getting low on freezer birds.  If we get them soon enough, they will be ready by Christmas.  We’ll see how it goes…

 

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