calling any one from missouri

Has anyone tried fodder? Is it a lot of work, does it save money? I am thinking about bees and trying to get honey. I am the Entomology 4-H project leader and thought it might be fun. My parents live next door and they have planted several fruit trees and a large raspberry patch. I might do a small garden.
Getting ready to try fodder here. Also debating trying bees, either mason or honey. Thinking mason to start, since they are such great pollinators and easier to do, but really want to try honey bees. We are going more ambitious with the garden this year. Will still do roma, green zebra, and red and yellow jelly bean tomatoes, but cutting back on the jelly beans and doing more romas. Doing more corn this year, and adding several bean varieties around them (thinking black, calypso, and tiger eye beans, maybe black garbonzos), doing cucumber again, adding zucchini, and trellising them this year. Will also add Athena mini melons, also on a trellis. Doing Lumina pumpkins again, adding sugar pie pumpkins, both on A-frame systems. Doing kale and brussels sprouts again, adding spinach and broccoli this year. Doing purple bell, red cherry, serano, and jalapeno peppers again. Doing english peas again. Adding sweet meat and spaghetti squash. Doing more herbs on the patio, along with trying blueberry for the first time and adding raspberry and maybe blackberry canes. Debating adding onions and/or garlic, as well as potatoes, just haven't made up my mind yet. Finally will do marigolds and nasturtiums again. Whew!! Lets hope it all goes well. This will be my first year trying to do a more staggered, 3 season garden as well.
fl.gif
 
Hiya

I and my flock live around the capital. I have moved out of the city and am working on expanding my flock, while also trying to help with the urban farm movement. Chickens are so rewarding and easy to raise, there is no reason that they should be raised in the large unused yards of the city or the fenced areas of the burbs.
Just officially joined BYC today, but I have been a long time reader and user of the info gathered together in the BYC community.

I currently have to old red sex links that were with me in the city. I have recently added a new silver laced wyandotte rooster that my parent received in their last spring straight run. I currently have three chick in the utility room of my house that will be one week old this Sunday as part of a winterizing experiment, which I plan on posting a thread about later.

Glad to see Missouri has a strong presence on BYC. Got to represent the Show me State lol
yippiechickie.gif
 
Thanks for all the welcome 's. I am taking a week off and planing my gardens. Bothe veggies and flowers. As well as getting everything lined out for my chicks in a month. I am planning to do fodder for thr chickens and the pigs. So if any one has any helpful info on the fodder I would be greatly appreciated.
 
Hiya

I and my flock live around the capital. I have moved out of the city and am working on expanding my flock, while also trying to help with the urban farm movement. Chickens are so rewarding and easy to raise, there is no reason that they should be raised in the large unused yards of the city or the fenced areas of the burbs.
Just officially joined BYC today, but I have been a long time reader and user of the info gathered together in the BYC community.

I currently have to old red sex links that were with me in the city. I have recently added a new silver laced wyandotte rooster that my parent received in their last spring straight run. I currently have three chick in the utility room of my house that will be one week old this Sunday as part of a winterizing experiment, which I plan on posting a thread about later.

Glad to see Missouri has a strong presence on BYC. Got to represent the Show me State lol
yippiechickie.gif
What city? I'm in the burbs of St. Louis.
I've worked with several cities in St. Louis county on their ordinances allowing chickens.


Well we made it through the cold with minimal frostbite. Getting ready to start up the bator and wait for spring! So glad to see so many on here close to me.

I have 34 chicks that hatched between the 1st and 3rd of January. I was going to set some more but I think I'll wait another week or two. I have to butcher a couple roosters that are currently residing in the brooder house so I can get these kids out of the cellar. I think the sub zero stuff is over for the year. I know long range forecasts are unreliable but Accuweather is showing teens overnight Thursday and on the 27th and 28th. Other than that, it looks like clear sailing for chicks in the brooder house. The current batch should be out there in the next week with hover brooders. I might run a propane heater in there on the nights it dips into the teens.


Thanks for all the welcome 's. I am taking a week off and planing my gardens. Bothe veggies and flowers. As well as getting everything lined out for my chicks in a month. I am planning to do fodder for thr chickens and the pigs. So if any one has any helpful info on the fodder I would be greatly appreciated.
I sprout all my grains now for the chickens rather than doing scratch. You may have already seen these buy you might want to look at these links.

http://www.foddersystems.com/benefits/poultry.html
http://backyardchickenlady.blogspot.com/2013/06/my-experiments-with-growing-chicken.html
 
I used to live smack dab in the middle of Fulton were I was going to college. I was rasing chickens in a rental run by our local slum lord. In a lot of ways the raised enclosed pen I had for the chickens was better than my rental home. At least it had less holes lol. I live in an old farm house now where I moved for work. I love the area. It is so pretty, full of rolling hills. It wa an old farm community that is moving quickly to the burbs. Luckly my current rental in nestled in an island between to stubborn old farmers, un willing to sell out.
I am also hoping to start bees this spring. I have all the parts to make my own top bar honey cow and am thinking of getting bees in Springfield, though they were raised in a Langstrom hive. I wonder if this will make any difference or if they have in any direction.
 
How the bees were raised won't make any difference in how you house them.
A mated queen won't leave unless a swarm takes place and the bees won't leave the queen. In a few weeks there will be hundreds of new bees that won't know what a Langstroth is.
 
That's what I was thinking, but its not what the advertisement said. I was willing to roll the dice but it was going to be a $100 plus gamble. That tends to give me pause. Thanks for the peace of mind lol
yesss.gif
 
It's a pricey leap of faith. I recommend starting with 2 hives. If you lose one, you'll still have bees, pollinating and honey. If you start early enough and have a good honey flow it's possible to pull honey the first autumn but don't count on it. A strong hive in the second year will yield a lot of honey. Top bars are very difficult to extract honey from so most people that have them are for pollination or comb honey only.

When installing a package or nuc in a new location, put some leafed out branches or other obstruction in front of the hive entrance. The obstruction will disorient them enough that they'll fly in circles to orient themselves before they scout or forage. Without an obstruction and a moved or new hive they may fly out and not be able to find home.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom