- Thread starter
- #181
jastech
Songster
- Mar 30, 2020
- 146
- 270
- 116
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I bought a farm I'd always wanted off a friend after her husband went into a nursing home (Alzheimer's) They'd always said if they ever sold the farm they'd offer to me first.She couldn't keep the place up by herself and her neighbor was pressuring her hard to sell.She admitted "someone" was trying to frighten her and shooting outside her window at night.She showed me the shell casing in the yard.Her family got everything out of their old home place and after I moved in I fixed it all up .I mended a few fences and replaced a few boards on the old barn . I planted a garden and built a huge chicken run for the chickens.Then one day out of the blue my water went off. My son in law checked and said the spring was overflowing but the reservoir had no drain lines in the bottom of it .No way to get water to the house. Some friends from a local Church came with sledge hammers, pick axes , shovels, hammers,chisels,etc and busted all that concrete in the bottom of the reservoir loose and ran new water lines .2 weeks later it was all fixed.Meanwhile the same neighbor calls me offering to buy the farm (claiming springs were sunk due to coal mining in the area). He offered me peanuts for the farm and I flatly refused to sell it to him -at any price! I kept it long enough to find a new place then sold my chickens to a friend down the road from me.I sold my farm to a lady I'd know for years ,someone who'd grown up in the area and only lived a mile from there. She gave me my asking price without quibbling and was packed and gone in a week(I heard thru the grapevine her hubby was in Hells Angels.)My neighbor immediately built a big wood box over his water spring the same week I sold the farm then he put a lock on the box.Only a guilty conscious makes a man do something like that.The lady who bought my farm lived in peace and he never tried to buy it again.I guess the moral of this story is if you do good you'll prosper in spite of your troubles.I never bought another farm .The first chickens killed were about 16' from side of house, didn't matter. These dogs running loose are hungry and some as stated here just like to kill chickens, ducks and my goats. So that's why my son and I built the hog wire coop with chicken wire over it. Yes, hardware cloth is better, I can't afford it at this time. If no dogs running loose and no thieves I wouldn't be having this problem. I didn't expect to spend 1,000 on a coop/run. Never had this problem before. That's the same as: I bought a car that I can afford, then it was stolen, Why didn't you build a garage with security??? Because some of us only have very little money, so we buy what we can. So if you can't afford the garage with security, then don't buy a car, just walk! My family needs the eggs to eat, we need the sells of the eggs to pay on utilities and buy food. Its not our fault dummies let their digs run loose and the city council ignores it, or that druggies cook meth in town. We have to live here, I spent everything I had to move and the down on this old ho
My son and I have been raising Red Star, Delaware and Barred Rock chickens a long with Pekin, Rouen, Runner and Muscovy ducks. I'm disabled so the eggs help the grocery bill and selling the extra eggs pays their food, treats and on utilities. My son went out to feed and this is what he saw.View attachment 2801622
That is sad, I'm sorry that happened to you. I hope to have our place secured and animals back up to the numbers needed for us to survive. Will be next year I think. Then get everything paid off so my son has a place to live if I die before he can buy his own (he's 14).I bought a farm I'd always wanted off a friend after her husband went into a nursing home (Alzheimer's) They'd always said if they ever sold the farm they'd offer to me first.She couldn't keep the place up by herself and her neighbor was pressuring her hard to sell.She admitted "someone" was trying to frighten her and shooting outside her window at night.She showed me the shell casing in the yard.Her family got everything out of their old home place and after I moved in I fixed it all up .I mended a few fences and replaced a few boards on the old barn . I planted a garden and built a huge chicken run for the chickens.Then one day out of the blue my water went off. My son in law checked and said the spring was overflowing but the reservoir had no drain lines in the bottom of it .No way to get water to the house. Some friends from a local Church came with sledge hammers, pick axes , shovels, hammers,chisels,etc and busted all that concrete in the bottom of the reservoir loose and ran new water lines .2 weeks later it was all fixed.Meanwhile the same neighbor calls me offering to buy the farm (claiming springs were sunk due to coal mining in the area). He offered me peanuts for the farm and I flatly refused to sell it to him -at any price! I kept it long enough to find a new place then sold my chickens to a friend down the road from me.I sold my farm to a lady I'd know for years ,someone who'd grown up in the area and only lived a mile from there. She gave me my asking price without quibbling and was packed and gone in a week(I heard thru the grapevine her hubby was in Hells Angels.)My neighbor immediately built a big wood box over his water spring the same week I sold the farm then he put a lock on the box.Only a guilty conscious makes a man do something like that.The lady who bought my farm lived in peace and he never tried to buy it again.I guess the moral of this story is if you do good you'll prosper in spite of your troubles.I never bought another farm .
I'm surprised you would have any predator attacks at all having had nine, now five dogs on the property. I only have two and they keep my place predator free, critters and humans.I "had" 9 dogs, 68 chickens, and about 43 ducks total. Now there are 5 dogs, 10 ducks and 17 chickens.
Agreed, I have two dogs that are off only during the day, and aside from the occasional raccoon we are predator free.I'm surprised you would have any predator attacks at all having had nine, now five dogs on the property. I only have two and they keep my place predator free, critters and humans.