Look up Square Foot Gardening online for ideas. I have the book and the website gives a lot of the same information.
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Thank you all for your well wishes!
Tab and Travis, I brought up pictures of my buckeye chicks(pea comb) and compared them to the new hatchlings. Both are very small and I can't tell a difference! Will keep you posted as to changes. Good news is the blue egg marked BXS is a Blue grey bird! Some birds gave black spots on their heads....could these also be sex links? The one OE is a black chick. Don't know if any of this info means anything to you, but am happy to give in as great a detAIL as you can stand! looks like 4 or 5 more will hatch before we go to bed(around 10) YAY!!!
Rancher, do you feed then in the incubator too? Doesn't it get messy in there?
Have a great holidAY ALL!
We're planning on using raised beds for most of the garden this year, as it's easier to weed them and to tailor the soil to specific plant requirements.
Here's a handy-dandy link on things to think about when designing your raised-bed garden, mostly because it leads to many other groovy links from the blogger, including designs that have worked for her: http://www.growingthehomegarden.com/2009/02/designing-raised-bed-vegetable-garden.html
Also, this is a nifty link on growing potatoes in what amounts to a big cube. Our potatoes went oogly last year because of all the rain. I think this method would keep them much happier, or at least drier in the event that we end up living in a rainforest again, so we're going to try it. It'd be a great use for pallets. http://lifehacker.com/5202849/grow-100-lbs-of-potatoes-in-4-square-feet
I haven't bought Square Foot Gardening yet, although I have it on my Kindle wish list (where I stick things while I decide whether or not to buy them). I'll have to check out the site!
I do want this book. The author lives in Maine. If he can manage four-season gardening up there, I should certainly be able to manage something around here (she says hopefully): http://www.amazon.com/Four-Season-Harvest-Organic-Vegetables-Garden/dp/1890132276
Ginny,
On the white chicks if you can't see little points on the comb then they should be pea comb and should lay blue eggs. Black spots? If the marans have a white spot, that means they are cuckoo not sure what the black spot would mean. Will have to see the pics to tell for sure. Congrats on the hatch and hopefully alot more came out.
Thank you all for your well wishes!
Tab and Travis, I brought up pictures of my buckeye chicks(pea comb) and compared them to the new hatchlings. Both are very small and I can't tell a difference! Will keep you posted as to changes. Good news is the blue egg marked BXS is a Blue grey bird! Some birds gave black spots on their heads....could these also be sex links? The one OE is a black chick. Don't know if any of this info means anything to you, but am happy to give in as great a detAIL as you can stand! looks like 4 or 5 more will hatch before we go to bed(around 10) YAY!!!
Rancher, do you feed then in the incubator too? Doesn't it get messy in there?
Have a great holidAY ALL!
We're planning on using raised beds for most of the garden this year, as it's easier to weed them and to tailor the soil to specific plant requirements.
Here's a handy-dandy link on things to think about when designing your raised-bed garden, mostly because it leads to many other groovy links from the blogger, including designs that have worked for her: http://www.growingthehomegarden.com/2009/02/designing-raised-bed-vegetable-garden.html
Also, this is a nifty link on growing potatoes in what amounts to a big cube. Our potatoes went oogly last year because of all the rain. I think this method would keep them much happier, or at least drier in the event that we end up living in a rainforest again, so we're going to try it. It'd be a great use for pallets. http://lifehacker.com/5202849/grow-100-lbs-of-potatoes-in-4-square-feet
I haven't bought Square Foot Gardening yet, although I have it on my Kindle wish list (where I stick things while I decide whether or not to buy them). I'll have to check out the site!
I do want this book. The author lives in Maine. If he can manage four-season gardening up there, I should certainly be able to manage something around here (she says hopefully): http://www.amazon.com/Four-Season-Harvest-Organic-Vegetables-Garden/dp/1890132276