Quote:
Allow me to make you feel just a tad bit better, that you aren't in MY checkbook ... err ... shoes.
I'm the animal procurer around here - I came home with 2 horses one day five years ago and now we have eight. I adopt dogs from rescues, shelters and people who just can't take care of their dog - one time coming home with an American Foxhound from the local shelter telling my kids "Don't tell Daddy!" We have now hit critical mass: 10.
Luckily we have a large ranch style house and several acres or else I fear we'd end up on Animal Hoarders.
Now I have finally indulged my "But I've always wanted a barn chicken!" with coming home with nine chicks from the feed store. And viola! Hubby had a big job to do - figure out how to build a coop and run from scratch. Luckily, he's the Best Eye Doctor in the World by day, and Handy Dandy Super Builder Man by night (and the occasional day off).
We figured we'd make a spacious mansion for our new flock -who presently live in a big box, and a galvanized tub in the garage at night, and out in the run by day. They have outgrown the box and the tub but we have no other option.
What we figured would be about a $1,000 project has now turned into ... let me count ... as of last night, $2, 241 project. And I wanted "free" eggs, too! Sort of like being given that "free" horse. Nothing's free!
So, at $3.00/dozen eggs bought at the grocery store, we figured up last night that this coop and run equals buying 738 dozen eggs! That's 8,856 eggs!
If the four of us ate a dozen eggs a week (I make a wicked Eggs Benedict and my hubby likes french toast) what we have spent on building this coop/run is equivalent to slightly over 14 years of buying eggs before we start to see the first dime in being ahead.
Feel better yet?