I've said before that the chicks were growing faster than I could believe. A combination of that and the smell that was filling my basement, motivated me to build a temporary coop out in the barn. Construction on the chicken house won't start until mid-June, but I needed them to have more room now. I divided one of the grain areas into two halves. This was formally the place I used to keep our female Rottie and I think she feels cheated. I have built some places to roost and also added 16 nesting boxes (acquired from an old chicken house at a buddy's farm). The chicks don't seem too interested in using either of them yet, but I did catch one roosting on top of the waterer one day (see photo). I think the birds are happier in their new home and, for me, it is easier to take care of them now.
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Chicks Becoming Chickens
I've said before that the chicks were growing faster than I could believe. A combination of that and the smell that was filling my basement, motivated me to build a temporary coop out in the barn. Construction on the chicken house won't start until mid-June, but I needed them to have more room now. I divided one of the grain areas into two halves. This was formally the place I used to keep our female Rottie and I think she feels cheated. I have built some places to roost and also added 16 nesting boxes (acquired from an old chicken house at a buddy's farm). The chicks don't seem too interested in using either of them yet, but I did catch one roosting on top of the waterer one day (see photo). I think the birds are happier in their new home and, for me, it is easier to take care of them now.
Monday, May 19, 2008
Asparagus anyone?
We have been up to our eyeballs in asparagus this spring. There is a patch in the garden, planted years ago by a previous owner of the house. This patch is putting out so much asparagus that we're able to have it every night and still have enough to make soup. Here's a look at the patch and then what the finished product looked like. It wasn't too bad, if I don't say so myself.
Monday, May 5, 2008
"First Time" Garden Experience
I said in my first posting this year that the word, "first" would appear many times in my entries. Gardening and growing my own food is something that has always been of interest to me, but I never got around to really doing it. A colleague of mine from work told me about this great nursery that she had been to and so we decided to check it out this last Saturday. I loaded the family into the truck and we headed on down the road for a day of gardening adventures.
The nursery is called Arnold's and it it proved to be all I was told it would be. Not only did they have a great selection of stuff but their employees were friendly and knowledgeable. We don't have much experience in gardening (actually we have next to none), so we had plenty of questions.
We managed to spend a couple hundred dollars on all kinds of good foods for the garden. We even picked up a green apple tree for Sam and a lemon tree for my wife. The lady at the nursery told us, "You'll get 20 lemons out of that tree during the growing season". Tathiana and I both had to chuckle at this because we used to get 20 lemons a day out of the tree in our front yard in Guatemala. Plus, we didn't have to take that tree inside when it got cold out.
There is a garden tiller story that I should tell here. It's a long story and probably one that only I find interesting. When we bought the farm, I acquired a small tiller with our farm. The place we had selected for our garden was, I believe, used for a garden by a previous owner (probably the builder of the house). Basically, I was busting sod that had been undisturbed for a long time. I was trudging through this process when my neighbor stopped by to ask me if I wanted to use his tiller. He told me that he had driven by earlier and saw me wrestling with my machine and thought I might appreciate using his machine. His, as he said, "Has air in the tires."
To make a long story short, the tiller was a life saver. I was under the false assumption that garden tilling required one to drag, push, pull, tussle, and wrestle with a machine in order to get it to till. My neighbors tiller (which he inherited from his mother-in-law, and incidentally had never used) was the Cadillac of garden tillers. I did my entire garden in slightly longer than it had taken me to do a few good rows with my old tiller. In the end, I bought it from his mother-in-law for $300 and a deal to prune here fruit trees and trim her hedges.
By the time we finished the tilling, planting (of everything except corn), and watering it was 9:30 at night. We all slept very sound that night. I'll post more pictures later.
Thursday, May 1, 2008
Tree House Completed!
The tree house is finally finished. We added a picnic table underneath to help stay out of the sun during the hot summer days. It's funny, before we made the tree house, my kids loved playing on a rusted, old, 1000 gallon drum (see hannah in attached photo). Now that the house is finished, they seem to still prefer the old drum.
Chicks in their new home.
Chicks Arrive
They were a long time in coming, but they are finally here. All 25 Delaware chicks arrived safe and sound.... and alive. The post office called me bright and early at 6:30 the other day. I drove up and picked up the chirping box, making sure to open it in front of the mail worker. When I got them home the kids were all ready to help get them into the cage. I had turned the lamps on, prior to leaving for the P.O. so that the cage would be nice and warm. While I was gone, Tathiana had filled all of the water and food jars so everything was ready when I returned.
I showed Sam and Hannah how to dip the beaks in water and they did the rest. We decided to only have them in two cages for right now, but will move some to the third cage when they begin to grow more. They are eating and drinking more than I thought they would. The feeding trays I bought are the kind that screw onto canning jars. They have a lip on the inside that is supposed to prevent spillage from the chicks scooping it out with their beaks, but I am finding lots of scratch still being spilled out.
We are having fun checking on them in the morning and then again after school and the late evening. They are already starting to develop small feathers. These chicks arrived about 2 months after I had placed the order, so it is going to be about Aug. before I start to see some eggs.
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