oo oo oo, I wanna be like you hoo hoo do be do be do be doop 

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Your climate is so different from what I'm familiar with that I hesitate to suggest other that what I know grows in southern California: pretty much any citrus (many have thorns), avocado (if you can get the fruits, can be sprouted from the stone), pomegranate, aloes...pecans can grow in New Mexico (hot and dry), almonds in northern Cali, lots of melons grow well in the heat, but require more of water. I wonder if ginger or turmeric would grow there: both rhizomes and can be sprouted from knobs in the fresh stuff if available in markets. Bamboo and eucalyptus would likely grow, but are usually invasive.Hmm that looks nice. I’m sure it can grow here, but not sure if it will act in an invasive way. Will keep an eye out for it next time I’m at a plant nursery.
Thank you. Yes, I’ve tried to keep the blackberries from getting trampled over. No herbivore (or omnivore, if you don’t count dogs) has access to the property, so them getting eaten completely isn’t my top concern.
some of the new bushes theoretically provide food for the local wildlife and chickens (the myrtle and the blackberry bushes), along with what we already have growing here. I’m definitely more interested in bushes that produce berries or fruits, or something of the sort. Grasses are abundant here, and the group nibble at the seeds quite regularly. The the seniors love them a lot.
I don’t think we have any deciduous trees here, and I certainly wouldn’t know where to start. They’re not that common here; where you really start to see them is up North, in Macedonia, Thrace and Epirus, for example
Your climate is so different from what I'm familiar with that I hesitate to suggest other that what I know grows in southern California: pretty much any citrus (many have thorns), avocado (if you can get the fruits, can be sprouted from the stone), pomegranate, aloes...pecans can grow in New Mexico (hot and dry), almonds in northern Cali, lots of melons grow well in the heat, but require more of water. I wonder if ginger or turmeric would grow there: both rhizomes and can be sprouted from knobs in the fresh stuff if available in markets. Bamboo and eucalyptus would likely grow, but are usually invasive.
.Are they wine grapes? The chickens in Catalonia loved the wine grapes. the vines were the first port of call after unlock in the morning. We had fig trees as well, four that produced fruit. Three of the figs trees produced the usual dark purple fig but the other produced green figs and they were my favorite and the chickens preferred them.The chickens love the grapes, and the have decimated any clump growing within their reach.
Aww, poor Sylph! Looking forward to reading about post-molt changes.Two hours, dry, around 11C but with some 35mph wind gusts. We had one spell of strong gusts that made the chickens take cover in the coop extension.
I can't help feeling sorry for Sylph. She's not laying eggs so, like many cockerels and young roosters I've found, Glais won't feed her or think she should have any treats. Glais has moments of being rather mean to her, chases her away from treat food in particular. Sylph isn't getting hurt in any of this and she likes Glais well enough. With Mow it's all "yes Mow and of course Mow."
Fortunately not only does the moult pass and as the boys grow up much of this behaviour stops. Anyway, he did drop a couple of bits of cheese for Mow, so that's an improvement. Early days.
Sylph ate some of the supplied feed this afternoon and went foraging with Mow and Glais. It looks like she going to do a slow bitty moult.
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I took this on the way home tonight. I had to do some shopping on the way home. This is Bristol Cathedral.
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Poor girl.Inky is going through her hardest molting...
October 27th
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October 29th
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October 30th (today)View attachment 4242373
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