Minnesota!

Interesting that even the goats won't touch it! They will nibble all around it and keep the area trimmed but will not eat this. I haven't seen it in the pasture - figure the horses wouldn't eat it either.
Burdock is a royal pain in the ar$e! The only way to kill it is to use something 2-4-D, like Weed Be Gone, but you need to catch it early or you have to use a lot of weedkiller to knock it down completely. Otherwise, a spade works if you dig down a bout 8-inches and get the root and crown. You won't get the whole root, it is way too deep.
Burdock had medicinal uses, but the root, NOT the leaves. What you are going to hate the most is the seeds. It is where the idea for Velcro came from. The seed pods are prickly and stick to just about any fabric or hair or wool or fiber of any kind. Got a dog? It will get stuck on you dog. If you get the little dusty sized hooks in your eye, you will want to gouge your eye out, it is hard to remove (the burdock bit, not your eyeball). The only thing I hate growing around here more than burdock is our Elm tree seedlings that pop up everywhere and you can't pull those once they are over a foot tall.
There is also another plant in the same family call curly dock. I can get a picture for you later when I am outside, we have it in some places but it pulls easier than the burdock does.
The other natural way to remove 'dock plants, get some hogs and let them pasture where you have it, they love it and will rut up the roots and all. They also leave fertilizer behind them ;)
 
Sorry about the double post.
I have found you can ask a person what Lake they are going to this weekend instead of just asking what they are doing and better than 9 out of 10 times they will tell you a lake!

So I ask you. What lake are you going to?
I am going to Rush.

We are heading south. My DH's family has a yearly reunion dating back to his Grandma's youth in Farmington. It's such a great time. Good food, people, games you just can't go wrong. Then we attempt to be in Cloquet in time for the fireworks.
 
About everyone seeing burdocks and animals not eating it. All the chickens, ducks, geese, pigs and cows love it so much they push the electric fence and get shocked for it.




Congrats on the babies Ralph!





My hatch started yesterday!!! Hatch day isn't til Sunday but it did get hotter than it should have been in the bator. I am hoping I eaited long enough so that the chicks from some r sired by my Splash Cochin roo. But most of the eggs r 4 weeks old (way to old in my opinion) but it was that or toss em.
 
Hope you have a good hatch rate Holm!!

Watching the ducks and geese splash in the water, chickens scratching in the dirt, and pigs rutting in the mud are such simple things yet seem to give me much joy!! Who knew that the simple things in life are the most pleasing?!
 
Happy Happy
jumpy.gif
Hatching @holm25
 
I have four chicks that hatched out Sunday/Monday last weekend. I moved them before the hatch, to a rabbit hutch. The bantam decided, one week in, that she was going to help set the eggs. She was pretty mean and on Thursday the week before last, one of the eggs went missing. At what age can I introduce them back into the flock? I've got a temporary enclosure ready to be built around the rabbit hutch so they can forage in fresh grass while they're little.

 
I have four chicks that hatched out Sunday/Monday last weekend. I moved them before the hatch, to a rabbit hutch. The bantam decided, one week in, that she was going to help set the eggs. She was pretty mean and on Thursday the week before last, one of the eggs went missing. At what age can I introduce them back into the flock? I've got a temporary enclosure ready to be built around the rabbit hutch so they can forage in fresh grass while they're little.


Hi! I can't help you with what you have going on. I have never hatched any eggs out. I just wanted to say howdy and I love your picture of Mama and chicks! Super cute!
 

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