Me too!!!
That's strange - mine sure do. When I am doing a batch of anything, I save everything that doesn't go into the batch in a big bowl and once I'm done, go down and throw it in the chicken yard. The birds go ape over all of it and it disappears in no time. I wonder if it has to do with having so many of them that they are always competing with each other for food. They eat what I throw out because they're afraid if they don't, a "lesser" bird will get it![]()
I don't know if we got any rain last night. We certainly had storms and the thunder and lightning went on for hours but I just looked at a bucket I left in the veggie garden and it was as dry as it was when I carried some compost up in it last night. Our rain gauge broke so I couldn't look at it this morning to know for sure.
I finally caught a break on the gender madness around here. The last 4 chicks I've hatched, that are being raised by broody hens, are all cockerels! I am so thankful as I have to keep hatching to break these broodies, and always tell myself "it doesn't matter if its a cockerel because we have a use for them". I really want to thin my numbers before winter so am glad these cockerels will be processing age before Christmas, so I won't have to feed them all winter.
Years ago, I was in a thrift store and saw what appeared to be a dehydrator on a shelf. It was marked at $3.80 but had a yellow sticker and yellow stickers were 50% off that day, so, although I sometimes worry that electrical appliances from thrift stores will not work, at that price, I decided it was worth the risk. I didn't have anything to dehydrate at the time so I put it away and…..years later realized I have never used it. Skip forward to this weekend when my neighbor was telling me about how she has dehydrated a bunch of apples and tomatoes this year and loves them as snacks. She does hers outside in the sun but with all my free-ranging birds there is nowhere I could put them that they wouldn't be eaten so - I dragged out the dehydrator, filled it up and plugged it in. Voila! It works brilliantly and in a short time we had lovely dried apples and tomatoes. They are incredible as a snack and can be stored on the shelf without taking the time and energy to can them. Plus, I put the dehydrator outside plugged into an outlet on my front porch while it was running, so it wasn't even heating up the house as it worked.
I don't know what's up with my chickens and their dislike of tomato skins. They'll eat all the seeds and tomato guts I throw out.
That's great about the dehydrator. I have one my parents gave me last year. So far, all I've done with it is dehydrate some pasta for the neighbor's Christmas present. I wonder why I never thought of using one with tomatoes; I have oven dried them in the past. It seems like a dehydrator would be so much faster and not heat the entire house up.