KlopKlop
Crowing
@duluthralphie must be sleeping in today




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So I was talking to some people about my chickens (funny how that always happens) and the were saying they have wished they could have chickens but never have because they don't have the technical knowledge to build a coop. It got me thinking of course... How cool would it be if there was a company that 'city folk' could go to and get a turn key backyard chicken system. I'm thinking on the scale of 2-3 hens only. They would basically be buying a backyard coop/tractor and the necessary equipment like feeders and waterers and it could even come with hens or started pullets. There could be some sort of training/schooling about chicken care included as well as follow up support as needed while they learn about their new flock.
I've added this idea to my list of 'income opportunities' for when I decide I'm tired of riding a desk on weekdays
Now to your post, There is a company that "rents" you chickens and coops for city people for 5-6 months. They charge a fortune but a person can have chickens without the winter hassles.. I have seen it on craigslist..
I don't know! I knew there was something about gases - that it could kill you, and I think I also thought you could be in a silo trying to undo a jam of corn and it would get loose and suffocate you. So...maybe corn? Never ever thought about silage. didn't know what it was.....I think that is why I really like the pederson boys from north dakota, who make a ton of you tube videos about farming - featuring them singing and grooving while they do various chores. Kind of a tutorial!
That't it!!!http://www.wsj.com/articles/will-2015-be-the-year-of-the-chicken-1419632701
I think the chickens you all wrote about are in this article.
I want a class on mushroom hunting, identification and eating...... I will be the 4th person to try each one, I will eat the day after everyone else..
Have you heard of "Rent A Chicken"? My husband thinks I should do it. I can build small coops in a day or two, and then provide the chickens and possibly small portioned feed. The thing is, I don't want to do it. I have more than enough to do already, and I can't believe it would be that profitable for me with time it would take (the way he thinks I should anyway, which includes a coop cleaning service).So I was talking to some people about my chickens (funny how that always happens) and the were saying they have wished they could have chickens but never have because they don't have the technical knowledge to build a coop. It got me thinking of course... How cool would it be if there was a company that 'city folk' could go to and get a turn key backyard chicken system. I'm thinking on the scale of 2-3 hens only. They would basically be buying a backyard coop/tractor and the necessary equipment like feeders and waterers and it could even come with hens or started pullets. There could be some sort of training/schooling about chicken care included as well as follow up support as needed while they learn about their new flock.
I've added this idea to my list of 'income opportunities' for when I decide I'm tired of riding a desk on weekdays
Have you heard of "Rent A Chicken"? My husband thinks I should do it. I can build small coops in a day or two, and then provide the chickens and possibly small portioned feed. The thing is, I don't want to do it. I have more than enough to do already, and I can't believe it would be that profitable for me with time it would take (the way he thinks I should anyway, which includes a coop cleaning service).
Yes, the big grain bins that have corn are a potential hazard if you go inside. My husband watched an entire docudrama one night about a young guy in Iowa who went into the top and was tethered, but the rope broke. They rescued him though, but some don't make it out.
Silos have the dangerous gases while they are fermenting. Haylage is chopped hay that is blown into the silo, silage is corn or corn mix (pretty sure we mixed sorghum into ours one or two years) that is chopped and blown into the silo. They ferment for a few weeks, then once that process is done, an automated unloader is set on top and will scrap and shoot the forage down a chute. Or, as we had, the "Armstrong" unloaders = us people with "arms" and a fork that went up and pitch it off. That is why no boys in high school would ask me out, they were afraid I would kick their butts. I started young scaring them though, in 4th grade I started arm-wrestling the boys and beat every one of them. By high school, I had some pretty noticeable 'guns' that they were threatened with. It is all good now, I ended up with a pretty amazing dude who isn't afraid of anything about meMy 17-year old is built like a bean pole and always talks about trying to bulk up. I tell him, go work on a farm. Of course, there are barely any farms any more that are like the one 'back home', which isn't there any more either, just a Harvestore silo no one wants. Pitching silage, pitching manure, breaking cattle to lead, bucking hay bales and carrying milkers to the dumping station, those will built up a body. Let's not forget what all that squatting under cows and getting up about 1,000 times a day will do for the glutes and quads and hamstrings! Oh, the memories of my youth! LOL