What do you use for footing on the plastic?Yes it worked for feathers, but the thicker construction type was needed in the brooder or if you do a bunch of birds
Pretty cool here. Low 60s the last 2 mornings. It hasn't been that cool since July 3.Is anyone else having a cool morning? It was nice to feel kinda cold. Not too cold though!
Looks like the worst of summer is over. Nothing much over 90 the rest of the way.
50-60F is right in my wheelhouse.Beautiful 60 here. My favorite temperature. I am going to enjoy it because the ninties are coming back. Yesterday was only 82.
My wife went to the Festival of the Little Hills yesterday with son and his girlfriend. She picked up 2 Christmas presents.I shop all year as I see something that fits a person, or I make things. I refuse to think of it. I want to enjoy a beautiful fall and not think of freezing rain and other cold hazardous icky stuff for driving or doing chores.
Instead it is time to ride, camp, and enjoy.
You're on oil heat?And I am worried about sliding down the hill on a sheet of ice, Duckling falling and hitting her head, and hoping I can figure out the snow blower.
Then there is, "Will I have enough oil? Will I lose power? Will I get the generator working? Will the flock be okay?"
And of course, the fact that I need to do "something" for decorations this year. Real Christmas or Santa, I can't stomach the holiday season anymore.
Mine wasn't by choice either. They closed our 58 year old factory when I had 30 years in. 20 additional jobs later in gigs ranging from 4 hours to 9 months. Several of which were out of town. I got tired of looking for work where I'd be working for morons so I just gave up.Like Sally, "I do whut I want". The difference is, I'm retired; have been for 3 1/2 years now. Wasn't by choice. I put in my 50 years, though; time to let the young bucks take the reins, while I sit back & reel off the "In my day" stories. Always wanted to drive truck OTR; never did. Ridden with my son a few times, though.
Likely.Isn't it a fact that you are never more than like six feet from a spider?
My arachnophobia was cured in a similar manner. When we moved into this house, the basement had been unused for a long time. It was empty except for successive walls of spider webs. If there was one spider down there, there were millions. I spent a day wearing coveralls with sleeves and cuffs taped to my gloves and boots with a complete head covering. I used a shop vac to suck up every one of those little critters and their egg sacks that I could find.You know that they make you sit in a room full of spiders, right?
Often when I float a small stream, there are lots of overhanging boughs and brush. Usually they're loaded with spiders that end up in the canoe. EWW!Don't worry Bubbles I hate spiders too....I was on a Fishing Charter boat last week.....way off shore. It was loaded with spiders and no way to get away from them...
I was on a 3 day trip and the canoe was filled with spiders. On the third day I got bitten. My arm was swollen by the time we loaded the boat.
I went on a big cub scout outing with my son - ONCE! I hated it.
These people had no clue what camping is about. They thought it was about subjecting yourself to unnecessary discomfort.
You weren't allowed to bring your own tent. You had to use the facilities they provided, which they had the audacity to call tents. They were basically 2 flaps of canvas. No floors, no doors. I went inside, turned on the flashlight and the walls were covered in spiders.
I spent 2 nights sleeping in a chair outside.
There was a very large swimming pool which was used in evenings. The pool, as big as it was, was so crowded, everyone in the pool could reach in any direction and touch someone else.
It was mid to upper 90s every day. Imagine all those sweaty bodies in the pool at the same time. The best I could call it was - unsanitary. Maybe I just don't like people that much.
IMHO, they don't teach anything useful about camping and the wilderness. Perhaps it is beneficial for urbanites but not for us.
My son had been camping for years prior to scouts, setting up camps, pitching tents, collecting firewood, building fires, environmentally friendly bathing, cooking and breaking camp. He learned nothing from the scouts except for having fun with his friends.
They eat roaches too. I've never sprayed for pests here and have never had roaches - just too many spiders.Any spider that does not eat mosquitoes is useless and should be smashed.
Lose the fan. The air around the incubator needs to be stable.I have a question.... My hubby bought a Hov-a-bator brand incubator for me. During the day the digital thermometer (bought separately) reads 102-103 with a fan lightly blowing on the unit, and at night it drops to 98 with a sweater wrapped around it. Are these temperatures okay? Is there anything I can do to stabilize the temperatures better?
Given that those temperatures are accurate, 103 isn't OK and 98 is pretty low.
Keep in mind that thermometers usually don't read constantly but intermittently. Depending on how far it is from the heat element and the type of thermometer, it could be reading high when the element kicks on and low just before it kicks on again.
Internal egg temperature will be more stable.
I normally get more pullets than cockerels each hatch.Yeah, I ordered thirteen heritage RIR this year and 9/13 were cockerels.
I've had 9 hatches so far this summer. In total there were 21 cockerels and 33 pullets.
The first one was 6 cocks and 2 pullets. The last was 7 chicks - all pullets.
Is she digging a mole run?I know y'all like dogs, this is mine. Best dog we've ever had. She's extremely intuitive. We didn't bother teaching her tons of tricks like we did with previous dogs... She's perfect as is. Jewel, 3 years old, half lab half Weimaraner.