Consolidated Kansas

Well we just got back from our lake cabin in Minnesota.. and came back to a HEAT WAVE! Holy crud!!! We were wearing jackets and jeans and sipping hot cocoa on the beach. I come back and my baby turkey is nearly dead, and my horses are having a hard time. My parents did an excellent job taking care of everyone. My mom had to take my turkey to the vet and he stayed for a 3 day visit because he nearly died. The vet tube fed him and gave him antibiotic shots daily- and I'm still giving a dropper of antibiotics for the next few days. He's really perked up and doing quite well. My horses have been getting bathed every afternoon. But my oldest mare is 31 yrs and it's hardest on her. This heat is just insane!

Reading back a bit and seeing you all talking about being self sufficient, and we are on the same page. My husband would love to go off-grid. He has spent the last 2 years checking into solar panel systems with backup batteries (the size of a small shed). However, the state of KS still does not reimburse for a portion of the cost like so many other "greener" states do (like california and Oregon). We've been going 'green' for a while now, though. I run a cloth diaper business and all of my kids used cloth when they were babies. My youngest is 3 and we are finally done with that stage in our lives. We do our best in recycling, and I started my first garden ever this year and it has turned out fabulous. I'm thinking of making another one. I used 4 rail road ties and placed them into a square and filled it up with about $60 of topsoil, mulch, etc from Walmart- so it was pretty cheap and it's great soil. I've also been working on starting a small orchard for us. So far, I only have 4 producing apple trees, but I hope to put in a lot more. I can only handle so much on my own, and I'm having to water them all the time right now. It still looks like we'll get a bunch of apples this year- they are getting big.

We don't hunt or fish, though. Nothing against guns- I grew up with them and we have an assorted bunch from hand guns to rifles. We just spend all of our weekends working around here and it's really not on our radar to think about going out and doing it. Who ever was talking about having chickens in the backyard and worrying about city ordinances, I do think the times are changing. I doubt the more ritzy neighborhoods with the HOA's are going to allow chickens or amend their covenants, but the more established neighborhoods that were build before HOA's are allowing them in Wichita, for sure. Right now, we are in a world food shortage, and they are predicting it to last for a couple more years, at the least. Wheat and other grains are in low supply and high demand. Expect your bread and other products that use grain to take a hike in prices again. People are once again turning to their own backyards to work their own gardens and try to become a bit more self sufficient. Don't know if any of you have young kids or babies, but cloth diapers are once again in high demand. It stretches the dollar and I even noticed my neighbors putting up clothes lines. (i know very well they have a dryer) I think this trend is wonderful and hopefully just picks up speed in making people realize that by having backyard chickens, or gardens, etc is going to help provide better living for themselves.

So... I know I said I was going to break ground on building my chicken coop the second I got home from vacation... but for now, I'm going to avoid heat stroke and continue to plan. I have gotten Lowes discount coupons, and am hunting down free supplies. Hopefully I'll be good to go soon when the heat eases up.
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Actually, no. I have never heard of it. I'll have to check it out.

Another thing we do is hunt. I guess we have an advantage there because we live own land that has quite a few deer. We are feeding up a bottle calf for beef. So with all the animals we always have plenty of meat.

It's the veggies I'm behind on . My garden is small, and right now the weeds are getting ahead of me in about half of it. I just put this garden in this year, and it is not on the best soil on the place. Fortunately, we do have good soil on the farm, it's just that when they put the house in we had some areas that we had to level out and some of that is down to the fill dirt. With mulch and chicken poop I hope to get some of that soil into better condition over the next couple years.

Sounds like me, Ivywoods. Hunting helps with self-sufficiency. So does fishing. I live a stone's throw from Milford Lake so we always have a fish to eat. Deer, ducks, and wild turkey as well. Your garden sounds like mine - I am behind on the weeds. My soil is slowly getting better with composting and manure. Chickens have made a big difference.

I also have a small garden and have no weeds but I cheat. I use a homemade earthbox for my growing.
 
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I wanted our newest (now 7 months) to be a cloth diaper baby. My wife did some research and found the diapers to be very expensive so we are using disposable right now. Do you have a website for your diaper business?
 
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Picture taken today: This is a picture of one of my apple trees I planted about 4 years ago. There are more apples on branches below these apples one- but for some reason the branch showing in the picture on the bottom is bare- don't know what is up with that. They are dwarf trees and still on the small side, but they do produce a lot for such small trees. I have two dwarf apple trees and two regular size apples- but the standard size trees are a couple years younger and need a lot more attention right now. Thought it might be fun to show off some apples.
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As you can see in the back ground- we have a lot more space to put in tons of trees and squeeze in a chicken coop.
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The horse pasture is to the right and there is another 7 acres- but the horses strip down all the trees we have tried to plant out there. We've been successful with an Autumn Blaze maple and a Silver maple in their pasture, but only because we fenced them in so the horses couldn't reach them. Those trees now are about 15-20ft high. We have hardly any trees on our property at all, so I've been really concentrating on trying to plant a couple more each year.
 
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I wanted our newest (now 7 months) to be a cloth diaper baby. My wife did some research and found the diapers to be very expensive so we are using disposable right now. Do you have a website for your diaper business?

I do- it's www.prairie-tales.com I've had the online store for a few years now and I'm going to shut it down for a few months after this Friday. I'm running a special promo code on my Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/pages/Prairie-Tales-LLC/139409797923 for 40% off in stock diapers right now. Otherwise, when I close down that online store, you can still buy my diapers in person at
Healthy Baby Boutique in Newton and Wichita, KS, and at Sweet Cheeks in downtown Wichita, and at Food for Thought in Wichita. But those will be at the full retail price. I'm just going to concentrate on wholesale orders rather than the retail end. (for now)
 
I raised all my kids in cloth diapers. I did cheat a little when we would go on trips or vacation and used disposable then, but that was the only time.

I always used some Borax with my laundry detergent and hung them on the line. I used the dryer when the weather was bad. I had good luck that way. It doesn't take long at all buying disposable diapers for the expense to add up to more than cloth. Do the landfill a favor and use cloth!

Another great advantage of cloth diapers.... when your child is potty trained they make GREAT cleaning rags!
 
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sounds like you were using Flats or birdseye? (with pins and covers?) That is great- but a lot harder than the cloth I use! My diapers actually look like disposables and have snaps to secure them with a built in laminate on the inside to keep in wetness, but still washable. When I was done with them, I just re-sold them used and threw out the ones that were really beat up. You know, I loved doing cloth laundry! Feeling like I was accomplishing a wonderful thing for my babies in washing and reusing, no chemicals, and saving moo-lah. I hung mine out to dry, too whenever I could- they get cleaner, don't stink and the sun whitens them right back up again.

I talked to my PO about shipping chicks, they said they have no rules about not shipping them now, but they recommended against it. (duh) I told them I was hoping to order in a couple more months or so.. when it is cooler and hopefully when my coop is done. How are everyone's chickens handling this crazy heat? Are they doing okay, or are they in bad shape? My turkey would have died.. anyone have turkeys? Are they doing okay? Why is mine being so tempermental and whiney??
 
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Do you have a picture? I really need to set up something different.

This is the hole I put the bucket into.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/51986_3.jpg

Here is the bottom of the bucket
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/51986_4.jpg

When I move the pen I put the bucket into a empty bucket
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/51986_5.jpg

View of the bucket in the hole. I can easily adjust height with spacer.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/51986_6.jpg

View of the tractor
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/51986_7.jpg

https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/51986_8.jpg

Chickens by the waterier
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/51986_8a.jpg

https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/51986_8a.jpg

This is what I used for the winter, you can see the cord coming out of the hole. I have a cap that covers the hole, the hole allows easy access for filling.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/51986_12.jpg

https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/51986_13.jpg

https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/51986_9.jpg

https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/51986_10.jpg

https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/51986_11.jpg

Very Nice! Thank you!!!
 
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Oh no! I am so sorry! After reading this and then going to bed, I had nightmares! I would say take them to the chicken auction...but it isn't until the 29th.
 
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I wanted our newest (now 7 months) to be a cloth diaper baby. My wife did some research and found the diapers to be very expensive so we are using disposable right now. Do you have a website for your diaper business?

This is a blatant plug for my daughter, but I try to help her out whenever I can. She is expecting her third son this fall and has cloth diapered all along. The boys potty trained faster too, so in the long run, by the time you reuse the diapers and get them out of diapers sooner, it works out less than disposables.

She's on Facebook and Etsy and at www.littlestarcreations.com
 

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