Showing posts with label poultry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poultry. Show all posts

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Saturday Journal



 







It's been a busy few weeks. First we were drenched with rain which halted everything in the garden and then the ducks and chicks needed to be moved so that took up all our time. Hopefully now that the rain has stopped and the weather man has said we will have a few days in a row of sunshine, things will get done in the garden.

The one very exciting thing, we ate a handful of pea pods! They were a bit bitter, but tasted sweet to us! 

Went to our green thumbed friend to ask a few questions about pesticide and bugs and he suggested Garden Dust from Bonide he claimed it was more natural than most pesticides, we'll give it a go and see how it goes. As it was by the time I got out there the bugs had chewed through every leaf (in a day). 

I'm not sure how the cabbages/Brussels Sprouts are going to do, they don't look well. I think it was too late in the season to plant them, or maybe it's the pine shavings? 

The potatoes aren't up. Dad dug up some of the potatoes and a few are rotten, some are growing, we are going to give it another week to see what happens.

Mom and Dad planted another garden to use some of the seeds before they went bad: carrots, squash, turnips and onions so now we have to gardens to watch. 

List from two weeks ago:

  • Weed tomatoes
  • Hoe between the rows
  • Mulch Brussels Sprouts
  • Thin the beans
What actually happened:
  • Watched Brussels Sprouts, cabbages, and potatoes drown.
  • Thinned beans
  • Roto-tilled or hoed a couple of rows
  • Trimmed tomato
  • Strung peas
  • Ate peas
  • Planted more: carrots, blue hubbard squash, butternut squash, turnip, onions
  • Weeded strawberries
This weeks list:
  • Keep an eye on the bugs
  • Re-plant potato, cucumber
  • Fertilize onions, tomatoes, peppers
How is your garden growing?

Stomper (age 1.5) munching on pea pods

Monday, June 4, 2012

Learning Curve


What a few weeks it has been. We have learned a lot in the past few weeks and, so we don't forget, I'm writing it all down.
  • Ducks are messy and smelly. What this means for the porch: the porch will be wet and smell funny if they are out there. Why they are messy and smelly: Ducks poop, a lot, all over the place. Ducks spread water, a lot, all over the place. Wet poop smells bad. Spread water drips out of dog kennel and on to porch making the porch wet on stocking feet. What to do next time: put ducks someplace where smell and wetness will not be a problem. Current solution: ducks live in barn basement.
  • Ducks grow fast. What this means: They will not last long in any enclosure. What to do next time: don't bother trying to house ducks and chicks together in current brood box. Current solution: ducks live in barn basement.
  • Ducks will be stupid with their food and water. What this means: They will get it wet and will lay in it. They will poop in it. Current solution: keep food far away from water. 


  • Broilers and Layers should not be house together. Why is this a problem? Layers jump, flutter, and perch, but broilers should never do these things. Hard lesson learned: I believe a broiler died due to jumping (but it could have been another ailment?) Current solution: broilers now live in the barn basement.
  • Broilers get big fast. Really, really, fast. They weigh quite a lot, a lot more than the layers
  • Layers can "fly". They can "fly" out of their brood box and perch on the edge. 
  • Chickens get shavings into their water. What this means: the waterer will fill up with shavings and they won't be able to drink anymore. What to do next time: get the hanging waterer in there ASAP
  • Chickens huddle for warmth and will squish each other to death. Hard lesson learned: chicks pig-piled and one got smothered. What to do next time: put something in corners so that no one gets stuck and make sure brood box temp is checked more often.
  • Chickens are distracting. What this means: chicken loving people may get "stuck" out on porch watching chickens a lot. Current solution: none, I enjoy it quite a lot!



This is the broilers and ducks new home. Actually, right now the fence is going in the other direction due to the torrential amount of rain we've had the past few days. The basement flooded much to the delight of the ducks and the dismay of the chickens.