PopoMyers
Free Ranging
Some of mine already sound caffeinated.I'm imaging a caffinated hen singing the egg song![]()
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Some of mine already sound caffeinated.I'm imaging a caffinated hen singing the egg song![]()
If you fill a bucket and leave it to stand the chlorine will evaporate out of the water.Our public water reeks of chlorine, so I have been using our inside filtered water for the chicks. Once they're bigger I will transition them to hose water.
This is why I wear a silicone ring. I’m sure my husband is simply ecstatic that I wear a piece of rubber on my finger daily instead of the nice expensive set he bought, but I prefer to save those for nice occasions while also saving my fingers from potential disasterI do my best to keep track of "inside" and "outside" hands. I wash them frequently, especially after handling eggs or being outside in general.
I have a pair of steel-toed boots I use only for working the farm, and then a few other pairs of shoes I only wear to town/travel. The boots stay right on the inside of the house door, after the two welcome mats. I try not to visit the other farmers with those boots on - I'll wear wellies or something similar if I can help it.
Generally I wear some kind of jeans and a specific hat. If it's been a tough/mucky day, then I'll try to wash the clothing immediately. I also take off my jewellery before I work. I've seen enough accidents to know a wedding ring is not more expensive than a human finger.
I have a pair of muck boots that I use for walking through the chicken yard and/or barn area. I take these boots off by the garage door because I don't want to track any manure, bacteria, etc through my house.Hi all, wasn't sure of the right forum to post this question in. I'm wondering about hygiene with regard to:
Do you all have strict rules/regimens about how you keep yourself and your things clean? "Always wash hands after feeding the chickens or collecting eggs," "have one pair of shoes/boots that you use for chicken chores and nothing else," or something like that? What about tools? I just got back from fluffing the bedding in my coop and decided to wash/disinfect the pitchfork, wheelbarrow, and bucket that I was using afterwards before returning them to the garage. Is that overkill?
- hands
- shoes
- tools
The water company uses not just chlorine, but chloramines. It doesn't "gas out", unfortunately.If you fill a bucket and leave it to stand the chlorine will evaporate out of the water.
I got salmonella long ago (before I had chickens) from eating chicken roast that was probably infected and undercooked.My mom tells of when she was growing up in Australia, in the years before air conditioning. At dinner time her mother would set out all the food in a nice display, and then grab her trusty bottle of fly spray and mist all the food and dishes and the kids with it "so everyone can eat in peace". Mom and all her brothers would be coughing at the spray, Nana would tell them to hush.
... It was DDT.
They survived. Does that mean it didn't impact their health? Should everyone bathe in it?
What I've observed through the course of my struggle, is just how oblivious people are and want to be about the spread of bacteria.
If you share a bathroom, there are other people's feces on your toothbrush (mythbusters proved it, btw).
If you go to the beach, there is aerosolized sewage in the ocean breeze.
Every time you touch a public door handle, you are spreading stuff on your skin you'd never touch if you could see it with the naked eye.
So, the myth of being "too sterile" just because one is not slathering themselves in bacteria is not something I believe. No matter what, they're going to get on you. Live on you, poop and breed on you, and eat you alive.
But what causes illness is dealing with too many at once. Sanitation keeps the numbers down so our immune systems can compensate.
We're already contaminated with Salmonella. When it's at the end of our digestive process it's fine. When we eat a bunch of it at once, that can mean a whole lot of toilet misery and possibly much worse.
* Forgive me if I'm too enthusiastic on the topic, but honestly I can't find it in me to hush.
Also, you're in Hawaii. You have every reason to believe the environment is a pleasant thing that wants you to live.
You can go wash your hair in some Shampoo Ginger, while I stare at the pots with dormant bulbs that should be making some for me. Stupid Florida winter!![]()