Chicken Update…

The mystery of the lack of eggs from the lil’ coop has been solved.

Too many roosters!!!

We have discovered that there were six roosters in there. Outta 12 chickens, 6 are roosters. Yeah. That really does cut down on egg production. And those poor six hens. So we went in and selected 4 of them to come out. Hopefully that will help the situation considerably!

Problem is, the four that we took out, are all beautiful roosters, all our homegrown, gentle and wonderful boys. We put them out in the big barn, in our little special holding pen we now call the rooster coop. They get lots of attention there, a big crock of food and water and in a nice sunshiney area. Lots of sweet hay to lay on and scratch through.

It was tough, but we have made our decision as to who gets to stay and who must go to auction. We’re keeping Flipper… our beautiful white splash Marans rooster. (get it… splash? Flipper the dolphin? ahhahah….) And we are keeping Silver’s brother Argent. He is another of the barred rock/blue Marans son of Bucka Roo. Just beautiful in his coloring and all. We are going to take the blue cochin rooster and a lovely Cuckoo Marans boy in for sale. Flipper and Argent are going to be the leaders of our new laying flock that we’re going to get for the poultry barn. Since they are brothers and raised together, they should do a great job and we get to keep them!

This is Argent, he’s a beautiful blue colored roo, still in that gangly teenager look, but filling out every day. He loves to be held and is just as gentle as you can imagine, but he knows too, how to take care of the ladies and protect them. I wondered why we were hearing a ton of crowing from the lil coop in the mornings… haha… 6 roosters will do that for ya.

We have to get some more hens! Maggie’s egg business is going nuts. We actually have NO eggs at the moment, not even for us! The ladies are still not quite up to normal production, we’re getting only about a dozen a day right now. They had a little stint where they were doing 3 or 4 dozen a day, but then it stopped and slowed. I hope that the lovely weather we are having right now is going to help to stimulate that again. But in the meanwhile, since we have a waiting list now of customers, we made the decision to go ahead and on Saturday, we’re going to try and score about a dozen new laying hens at auction.

We have about a dozen chicks in the house, but they won’t be layers for another 6 months. And we have 5 pullets that SHOULD start laying soon, but they will only lay teeny eggs for a month or two. So. I guess it means more mature hens!

Maggie and I worked all afternoon, cleaning out the big table in the poultry barn. It’s a project that we’ve been working on here and there through the winter. The poultry barn is this big 20 foot wide by 50 foot long building we have on the farm. It’s connected at the north end with Cody’s barn. Cody’s barn is two stories tall, but the poultry barn is just one story. Last fall, we knocked all the side tables of concrete down as they were failing and pushing out the side walls. Thankfully, that has stopped and the building is no longer slowly failing in that manner. Inside there is a huge 8 foot by 32 foot long suspected concrete table. This is where we will be putting our two brooders, one for chicks, one for turkeys and also a big long coop in the middle, for our new laying flock.

(If you look past me raking… you can see the long poultry barn, with Codys’ tall barn at the end of it. It’s really a huge building and a shame it’s just empty. Has junk in it.)

This picture shows the raised table, it’s 32 feet long, 8 feet wide and very solid.  It has cement blocks underneath just in case any section should fall.  It just had a bunch of old junk on it, and the cut wood from an old dead apple tree, stuff like that.  Maggie and I carted it all out, and swept off the whole table, and then cleaned off the little sidewalks on either side.  Now, there is still a bunch of wood and rubble from the sides that we tore out, but they won’t interfere with the coops on the table and we plan to get rid of that stuff one wheelbarrow at a time!  The wood is over 45 years old and rotten, so we will probably just be burning it in our campfire over the summer.  I thought we might be able to salvage it, but aside from rustic old signs from some of it, most of it crumbles in your hand.  And it’s got tons of nails and junk through out it.  It’s pretty nasty.  There is also a ton of broken concrete rubble…  I have two ideas for that.  One is to cart it out and use it along fences as borders, and the other is to use it for filler material for new concrete floors on either side.  I suspect that we will first get rid of all the wood and other trash junk and then level it out and see what is left.  A summer project for many weeks, I suspect!

 

 

I wanted to take new pictures but we got to working and then it got too dark!  I’ll take some tomorrow, when we start to build the new coop.  But if you could imagine, that whole wall where the fan is?  We took down the fiberglass sheeting and opened it all up to the weather.  And the sunlight.  The fiberglass as falling off anyway.  We’ll repurpose it later on as roofing for the turkey roost that Maggie is going to build in the back.  I hope to rebuild the supports in that back wall (they are all rotted out) and then put up a couple sheets of clear green house siding.  I think that would be really nice.  Would let in the nice warm southern sunshine, but also keep out the rain and wind from the chickies.

We plan to build a little habit-trail tube over to the western wall and to an opening where the chickens will have a nice big outside run.  That is stage two of the build.  Something that we can shut to keep them inside, and open to let them out to play.

Now, you might wonder… why not let them free range, like the others?  Well.  We have come to the conclusion that we love having the flock that ranges all over.  However, we want to keep it to 20 birds or less.  Because they just have a habit of getting into trouble.  They poop all over and they get hit by cars.  Okay, only two have been hit by a car, but still, that is two too many in my book.  I don’t want them getting hurt!  So we decided that our new flock will have to be sequestered a bit, but still, they will have a huge amount of space available to them, including a big run on the side of the poultry barn.   50 feet long by probably 6 feet or so wide.  They will be very spoiled indeed.  And we will probably let them out now and then to do clean up and such in the garden, that sort of thing.  We will be selecting a few of the free range birds to join the new poultry barn flock, just to whittle the free rangers down to about 20 birds.  Right now, we have 30 in that flock and it’s just a little too many!  You live and you learn this new life.  I absolutely love having them follow us around and greet us in the morning and they do a fantastic job of keeping the bugs at a nice level.  We just want to make sure they are safe and that they are not overcrowding the area and messing it up too much.  Chickens do poop… and while it’s great fertilizer for the yard and such, it’s not as fun to sit in it or step in it all the time when they decide to poop all over the sidewalks or the chairs and benches.  Of course, it’s way way better in the summer because the grass is growing and it rains and such, so I suppose that we are seeing a higher percentage of poop all over because we just haven’t had those things going on for 6 months.  But still, it seems like a sound idea.

All our little chicks are doing great!  We have another set of eggs due to hatch in the next couple days, but I’m not sure how well they are doing.  We had a great hatch at first and then had a set of about 8 eggs that failed to hatch.  This last batch is so so.  I candled them and they are looking okay, but just not great.  Hard to know why or what is going on, but I suspect it’s the incubator.  As I understand, the styrofoam inexpensive incubators are great for a hatch or three, but then they just start to fail and their percentages drop considerably.  Just not sure why.  I have my suspicions…  I think as the chicks first start to hatch, the sytrofoam is getting contaminated from the broken eggs and messy situation of the first hatching chicks.  It’s so sad to see them grow and get close and then die in the shell.  I know that even under a hen, you rarely have 100% hatch, but still, I think I’m too tender hearted, it hurts me that they don’t all make it!

I think that I’m going to save up my banjo money and get one of these Brinsea incubators.  They have super good recommendations, do smaller hatches, but with super nice rates of incubation.  They are all automated, with humidity and temperature and rotation.  And they know when to stop rotating and such, even with timers and such.  And they are all plastic, so they are easy to clean and keep clean.  I believe they have an 8 egg and 12 egg model.  Nice small unit as well, and with a air fan to circulate air and such.  They are a little pricey, $140 to $160 dollars, but if they can hatch out a nice group of special eggs with a high success, I believe the unit would pay for itself after a few hatchings.

But right now, after these last ones… I think I’m done for awhile.  Just a little discouraged the last two hatches.

The good thing is that it’s chick days at the Tractor Supply and we’ve been having great success with that!  Apparently each of the TSC’s gets a weekly shipment of chicks from the hatchery.  They get the cornish rock for meat, and they get your basic leghorns and Isa reds for egg production.  But, the neat thing is that they get an assortment of heritage birds, whatever the hatchery has extra that week!  One time they had beautiful Amerucanas!  And this last week, they had barred rocks.  And they were 50% off because they were getting older!  So we got four of them and two isa browns to add to our little gang in the living room.  They are cheaper a bit then the hatchery and no shipping charges.  I think that is pretty cool.  We’re going to call around tomorrow and see what our three TSCs in the area have gotten.  We’re hoping for a few buff orphinghams and maybe some Amerucanas…  who knows?

Yeah, I think we’re not going to be happy until we hit the 100 chicken mark.  It will be soon, because we’re going to be ordering our meat chicks soon.  I went to order them this weekend and our hatchery is out until May!  May!  I’m trying to decide, do we try another hatchery or go with some TSC meat chicks and then order the rest for May?  I just don’t know for sure.  Guess it depends on what heritage birds they have at the local ones…  We’ll be sure to post our final decisions as soon as we know them!!!

Well, I’m happy that Windhaven is becoming a little poultry farm.  After all, the Armbrusters had a chicken farm here for over 80 years!  It’s in the ground here, in the lifeblood of the place.  We love chickens, even Jessy.  She loves to baby the chicks and all and admires the hens from afar.  She can handle them in the coops a lot better than the free range ones.  There is something about the adults and their flapping that bothers her.  She’s not sure why, but we don’t want to torture her, so we choose to keep it to a low level for her, so she can enjoy her farm too!

Sheep, chickens, bunnies and gardens!  That is going to be our specialties!  And hopefully by this weekend, we’ll have more hens to help with our egg production and to satisfy those of our local friends and customers!  A dozen new hens should give us about 5 to 6 dozen more a week.  It’s probably not enough, but well, we can only add so many girls at once!  If our main flock starts to get a little more regular, we should be able to produce about 20 dozen a week, something like that.  That should help!

 

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Week Four… Spending!

Another week… and I think it was okay… though we did get a little crazy with the farm stuff this week! (We bought chickens!!!)

Here’s the totals…

Kerosene 6%
Gas 11%
Fast Food 3%
Household 21%
Pets/Farm 37%
Bills (Internet) 18%
Extra 4%

Spent a total of $489 bucks.

Made my second order from Soap.com… ABSOLUTELY love them! $45 got me all the stuff I need for about 2 weeks. paper stuff, girl stuff, bathroom stuff… and NOTHING EXTRA! I love it. And I was able to get all 7th generation stuff for my paper stuff… all 100% post consumer recycled! yeah! I like that.

I went to the Dollar Store… ONCE and only got exactly what I wanted. $8 and out the door.

My extras were slim as well… bought a book of ebay and also Season Two of Friends on DVD cheap. Since we don’t have cable, what I’ve been doing is every so often I get a good TV series on DVD… it’s a whole bunch of episodes and takes me a couple weeks to chew through. Cheaper than cable!

My average receipt this week was $32 bucks… I really think about that now… knowing that “stopping” somewhere or buying something is at LEAST $25… that really makes me think about too many little stops. It’s lists for us and no more goofy extra impulse buys.

Got two more weeks to go and then a big look over and see how it all pans out. I know this coming week is gonna be a killer for bills and such… Got a big electric plan payment for $250 to make and a cell bill of $160… those are two big gorillas hanging over my shoulder! But we can do it. Thank goodness the weather is warming up and we’ve actually had two days that we had no heaters running and no kerosene either! I predict that will help GREATLY!!!

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Saturday at the Hillsdale Auction…


We got up early and we rounded up the 9 banties that we wanted to take to auction. We had made the decision that we didn’t really want to raise banties any longer. We like them, but they are so little, that we really worry about their safety around here. And we’re not that fond of banty eggs, because we get enough midget eggs from the pullets! So, we rounded up the gang and off we went!

We were a little sad to include Lucky with the bunch, but it didn’t make sense to keep him only, and separate him from his girls that he adored. So, we said farewell and it was okay. We knew that there would be a good new home for him. (And yes, he did get a great home by the looks of it!)

We left around 8:30 and got there at 9… and it was already busy! The chicken area was filling up fast! I don’t think I’ve ever seen all the cages filled up. And a lot of bunnies too! Lots of people there… it really was one of the first nice weekends and I think there were a lot of people with the same idea as us! It was crowded!
I wanted to bid on this cage of barred rock hens but the bidding got up over $6 a bird! So that was just too rich for my blood.
Went and wandered about all the stuff auctions, it was a bit cold and I just really didn’t see anything that I really wanted. Maggie found a few things inside the vendors and Jessy was busy checking out all the bunnies. There were some fuzzy bunnies, but it was hard to know if they were angora babies or it they were Jersey woolies? So it was best to just avoid them. We want to establish a pedigreed rabbitry and auction bunnies are just well, not quite the place to do that. Still, they were all really cute. We’re going at the end of the month to a rabbit show close to home and we are hoping they might have that French Angora girl we are dreaming about…. (gg)

In the waiting area for the bigger livestock auction area, there were a few full sized/grown goats but the real attraction was the gaggle of goatie babies that a fellow brought in. Must have been 15 or 20 of the little rascals… several different breeds represented. They were simply adorable and it was a good thing that I didn’t have any money left when we watched them get auctioned off after lunch. It was hard to resist their uber cuteness! But I’m really a sheep gal at heart and we already did and tried the goat thing without a lot of good luck for us. I would like to consider ONE small angora goat at some point to round out our fiber operation, but that has to be the right and perfect goat, so I’m not expecting that to happen any time soon. They are having a specialty goat auction towards the end of the month, and it is in conjunction with the rabbit show, so, well…. maybe if they had an angora, but I’m not holding my breath on that! Haha….
There was just one cow.. a little Holstien calf. And he looked very lonely. Poor thing. Made me want a cow real bad. But…. that’s for some other time!

We couldn’t find Jessy for awhile, and started to look until we found her in the chicken barn (big surprise!) and back where the bunnies were. She had fallen in love. With a little dwarf bun bun. So told me she really wanted her and so I put on my Auction Mom bidder hat and decided I would get her for her. She had some fun money and was ready to go as high as need be to rescue her little baby. So I got in a good spot and when they started it out, I bid high… $5. All the other small bunnies had been going for about 2 or 3 dollars at the most. I scared them all off and it was the only bid. I got her! Yeah!

Meet Velvet… spoiled teeny bunny of Windhaven! Already she has a special place in the office with Jessy. She’s an indoor bunny! Haha… and soon to be super duper spoiled. I was glad to see Jessy act a little well, impulsive! She is usually my kid that isn’t into too many silly things or just because things. She’s the responsible one of the bunch of us here. But she loves that little bunny and she carried her around at the auction tucked in her coat! And Velvet was very happy to do so. She’s a gentle and sweet little soul for sure. A match made in Hillsdale!
Saw this crazy little banty roo… he’s one of the fancy Mille Fleur banties that we were considering raising. I didn’t see what he went for, but I’m sure it was a good price.

Our banties all sold for a grand total of $29. Maggie was thrilled. She’s saving her egg and chicken money to help with her turkey empire plans. And to help buy some equipment for her wood working business. I’m glad that she’s into the whole thing. It’s fun stuff for sure.

We went to lunch in the town and then returned to watch the big stuff get auctioned off. It was still sort of slim pickings, just mostly the goat babies and the one calf. It will get more exciting as the weather warms up a bit more. I’d like to see it when there are more sheep and other animals there! Who knows what we might find to bid on! It was fun to watch the ring handlers deal with the crazy little goat youngins… that was worth the wait! Our neighbors came too and Miss Julia got a cage with some little parakeets in it! So sweet… she said they sang all the way home! I got some meat and a cheese cake from the grocery vendor and we had that ham for dinner and it was super good. Got a nice turkey breast, too. It was a fun day for sure. Really enjoyed ourselves!

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