If Mugs Monday is all about beards and muffs, then Bella says hi!

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I am trapped inside the Chicken Palace. No, not a faulty door catch but tree trimmers.
The chain saws and the chipper make quite a racket and the Princesses are not at all at ease with it.
In brief updates
- I think maybe maybe Bernadette’s leg is looking a bit better. Definitely not normal but less useless.
- Minnie continues to look awful. She showed interest in a piece of shrimp yesterday so when I am able to get out of here and back to the house I will cook her up a few shrimp and see if I can get her to eat. I got as good a look as I can at her ears - it is really hard because the feathers protecting the ear canal are reall stiff like a scrubbing brush so almost impossible to look underneath. But she definitely has no ear discharge or gunk
What on earth is wrong? it's been weeks of worrying for you
 
Mink sighting last night, about 9 pm. I closed In the Goats and Free range Flock about 8:30 then drove down to the farm to do a load of laundry and steal some water so I can hopefully get some more cleaning done or the dishes today. It was inside Hawk’s Run and eating from the feeder when I drove up then hid in my remaining trusses, and eventually I chased it into the trees to the North (mountain side) of our road. I strongly considered moving the chicks back inside, but am a light sleeper and they are right next to our bedroom window (open) and have excellent contact with the ground in the meat tractor. They were all in the one solid huddle box, not the vented top part so I placed that at the opening to the solid one like a little run and positioned cardboard around the hole in the back. Didn’t sleep well, and at 2 am we got rain and I had to go out and get them a tarp and cover up all the cleaning stuff I have out (I am currently detailing all our vehicles) then 5 am DH had to leave for the ferry, to get sausage making supplies and some crumbles for the chicks.
 
Speed of growth is one reason. Grafting uses an established root system which can take a tree years to develop from a seed or a cutting.
And grafting is essentially the same as a cutting except you are not growing the root system from scratch… most of my information on genetics comes from my indoor growing experiences in my late teens and 20’s and an interest in reptiles and the wonderful world of ball python breeding. But it does help in my current chicken interests in looking at dominant, co-dominant, recessive, and allelic genes and how they show up. It also allows you to grow different types on the same trees which can be useful if you need to cross pollinate or a variety is improved by cross pollination and you have limited space. I put a 5 variety grafted apple tree in our back yard in the city, as I only wanted two or three medium sized fruit trees in the (relatively) small city yard.
 

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