Okay, I'm super excited now!! I went up to candle my last remaining call duck egg and saw it wiggle!! EEK!! Tuesday is our estimated hatch date!e Come on, little ducky!!
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Yay! Best of luck, can't wait for pics.
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Okay, I'm super excited now!! I went up to candle my last remaining call duck egg and saw it wiggle!! EEK!! Tuesday is our estimated hatch date!e Come on, little ducky!!
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Thanks! I thought you had kept some Cornish crosses. The problem is I want to keep 7. My family ask me why I am going to do with 7 meat birds. Well love them of course. Doesn't seem like issue to me lol, who cares what they think-I bought themSilver appleyard are very attractive. I know of a breeder, PM if you are interested. I have purchased several hatching eggs from him, and his birds are lovely. My goodness, congrats on the ribbons! Your birds are just gorgeous. On the CX's aka cornish cross... I have a 2 year old girl named LilX I kept. She lays huge double yolkers about 5 days a week. She walks like a sumo wrestlerbut is still a very sweet girl. Here is her and Bacon (RIP Bacon)
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Good to see ya!
It was a hen that was making te dog noise. It was so cute. And to think that is what they sound like when they are scared, I can't imagine what thy would sound like when they are happy! Now I want a turkey! I don't want any males though, i just don't think they look cute. But the hens do.I have a lavender orp roo I am probably cooking. He is ok with us, but is hurting the hens. One of my girls had skin torn off her neck from him. I caught him pecking her head, put him in jail and almost cried when I saw her neck. I sprayed her with blukote, and put her on antibiotics. She is confined so she can heal also. Oh awesome! Thats where I buy seed from too! I am pleased with the bicolor sweet corn. I think the fist batch was picked too early, its shaping up a lot better now. Lovely colors, Thats what I work towards too. The hens do, that's a "I'm scared and don't like this" call. A happy turkey trills and makes pleasant sounds. Poults make adorable sounds you would really love.
Welcome back! You were missed! I'm sorry to hear of your trying time with your broody and hatchlings. Fingers crossed that the drama is over, and a few normal days come your way.
Yes, I totally hear you...I SWORE I wasn't having chickens in the house again, but somehow, it happened. But AGAIN--I'm vowing that poultry will stay outside....Lets out a few peeps now and again just to remind me I now have 2 babies in my bedroom again. Which of course gets the other baby chirping. Tomorrow, I will put them both in the same brood box with a divider, they are 5 days apart in age.
And of course, I have Mama and 3 feral kittens who just got fixed in my big brooder outside They should be able to be let loose Monday, and 12 baby poults in my great dane cage in the dining room, but they are 3 weeks old, so too young to go outside yet. So I need to rig something up for them tomorrow.
I bet it's an awesome experience to pick up a Canadian goose. What do they weigh--about 11 pounds?I have a daily visitor now. a very friendly Canadian goose hen.
I have actually picked her up, took her in to see Mom. She just showed up in the yard a few days ago.
The gander with her is fearful and won't visit, but at feeding time she is coming right in like all the other geese,
So, I won't confine her, but I welcome her visits. What a beautiful graceful goose too, I am wondering if she wasn't "relocated" at the park.
We usually see a large flock in the north pasture, but never have them close up begging food. My nephew took pics of her, will ask him to send them so I can post.
She is clearly imprinted on people. Who ever abandoned her gave her a good chance at the park. Just sad that she was, pretty obvious since she is not afraid of humans or other livestock.
Peanut (Bonbon's cousin twice removed) is our bantam black orpington, and she's not laid any eggs ALL YEAR because she's been broody!Bonbon (my avatar) is broody again, which doesn't surprise me...
Thanks for sharing that link. I don't know that family, but I like the way he narrated the story. I liked his writing style in the written article that accompanied the video, too. When he asked his wife for the hammer, I cringed!
Next round of pics....
Our greenhouse roof had sprung leaks around the skylights. This had been our rabbit barn before we moved. We're thinking the moving process broke the seal around the skylights. The roof decking in those areas had rotted away, so this weekend DH replaced it. Tar paper is down, but still needing shingles yet. Hopefully it isn't leaking now because we finally got some rain. (We've been in a bit of droughtlike conditions here. Last week just a few miles north/east of us rain cells went through & they got 3 inches -- not a drop here!) I'm hoping we get a good rain today.
This is our new windmill. We got it in June to aerate the pond. If you look just left of the center of the water you can see where it bubbles & the wave rings coming from it. There is a baffle in the top of the windmill that pumps air through a hose. You can see the black hose towards the bottom right of the base of the windmill. The rest of the hose is buried in a trench that leads out to the pond and goes out to about the middle of the deep end. There's a round disc connected to the end of it through which the air then bubbles out. Of course it doesn't do anything on windstill days, but most days it's spinning & you can see the bubbles. You can also tell how dry it's been here by the edge of the pond -- our water is down about 1 foot now from where it usually is.
For some reasons my garden pics are a bit blurry, but that's OK -- it disguises all the weeds!! We had all the weeds cleared out, and then fair came. I can tell the plants have suffered from lack of rain and cooler temps -- a lot of stuff is smaller than it should be and just behind schedule.
I promised someone a long time ago (my apologies!) that I would get pics of our orchard. We planted this spring 2012 and the trees were just whips (average 4 ft. long "sticks"). They've all grown quite nicely (and yes, they all survived the summer drought of 2012). There's a mix of about 30 different fruit trees.