I enjoyed watching a video in which a Shop Vac is used to suck up the yellow jackets.
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It does include other peoples plots. I'll mark out a map. It's difficult to keep track.@Shadrach when you let them out into the "field" is that an area that includes other people's allotments or somewhere separate?
Oh yes.Have there been any issues like them getting onto people's plots and eating their veg, or other plot holders with dogs that want to chase the chickens when they're out?
No that all makes sense, thanks for taking the time to type it out.It does include other peoples plots. I'll mark out a map. It's difficult to keep track.
There is the coop.
There is the coop extension.
There is the coop run.
There is the extended run.
Finally there is the field.
All the above are within the field boundary.
The field is just over an acre.
Oh yes.We have had a few problems, probably less than one might expect I'm pleased to write.
It's analogous to the disputes in the USA between the cattle ranchers and the crop farmers. The cattle ranchers are usually the bad guys I'm led to believe from the books I've read and the films I've seen. I'm the bad guy with the ranging livestock.
It was one large field with the orchard taking up around a third of the acre and a single large growing plot in most of the rest. Some years ago, before I joined the group it was decided to make individual plots. These plots were rented out, cost based on size. Interestingly this is one of the primary "you may not do" in the lease. Technically it's sub letting and that is strictly forbidden. That's why I drew up the field membership agreement. You join the group. You are not guaranteed a plot. I think everyone who has wanted a growing plot has had one so far.
New members are warned that we have livestock. They are told very clearly that the field is not an allotment and that we, the group, are responsible for the entire field. Unfortunately lots who come to the field are really after a council allotment and are not interested in cooperative growing and field maintenance and some behave as if it were a council allotment. People are told to protect their crops. Of course this requires some though on where one grows what. It also involves some extra expense.
A few have welcomed the chickens on their plots and haven't really cared if the chickens ate some of what they've grown. There are others, the ones who really should be on council allotments, that complain about every beak full and want their plots looking like carefully manicured show gardens.
It's a constant battle. Yes it has gone seriously wrong when the chickens have hit a particular plot and stripped a few plants. This is my fault rather than the chickens. I haven't kept a good enough eye on where they are and what they are doing.
All the above leads to what I am trying to do now which is to increase the size of the extended run, plant hedge and other shrubs, bushes and plants that the chickens can eat, or which provide a habitat for things the chickens can eat. With this done and fenced I can leave the chickens in the extended run while I do stuff and when I've done what I need to, then I can take the chickens onto the field and supervise them properly. Thankfully this arrangement only applies in the growing season. Over the winter months the chickens have the entire field to themselves most days.
Hopefully I haven't confused matters further.
And spell check doesn't like yellowjackets as one word.If you write German yelowjackets as 3 separate words its gets lost in translation.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vespula_germanica
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