BlindLemonChicken
Free Ranging
It’s also sobering when you have 26 on less than an acre and they choose the garden over the weeds lol.It’s pretty sobering how quickly 3 pullets can clean out a patch, and now we have 5!
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It’s also sobering when you have 26 on less than an acre and they choose the garden over the weeds lol.It’s pretty sobering how quickly 3 pullets can clean out a patch, and now we have 5!
It's a really difficult thing to guesstimate.how do you know when they’ve pretty much cleaned out a patch?
This is what I’m seeing. I was curious whether it was simply just the time to eat this other stuff, or if they were desperate.… A couple of months ago they wouldn't have touched the stuff they eat now. Currently it's a bit of most anything that looks fresh and green. The seeding grasses they were fond of done, even the short grass is mostly stubble at best, althought I do keep a few patches watered which they nibble on…
That’s what you get for planting stuff with eye appeal!It’s also sobering when you have 26 on less than an acre and they choose the garden over the weeds lol.
We've had some blueberry feedback.Is that a doody on Mow's booty?
Basically but green manure I'd say is generally more specifically planted as a soil fertility thing - often it'll be a nitrogen fixer, or a mix including at least one N fixer. Before it flowers and sets seed it'll usually be either chop & dropped, turned or ploughed in to the soil, or cut down by frost and left to break down on the soil after that.Thanks! I’m figuring that green manure = cover crop. (I see both terms in US publications.)
Greater plant variety within the same space. They'll forage on something now, and circle back to something else later due to it growing differently. Mine like grass stems when they're young and fresh. If I can let the grass grow, then when it reaches @6 inches or so, they stop trying to crop it. Once it sets seeds, they come back to the grass for the seeds. Meanwhile they're in another area eating something else like the Nanking cherries or the currants..or coming back through for the grasshoppers and the flying ants. When the pea tree hedge starts popping pods, you would think they would be in that immediately, but no. They wait on that until they're moulting. I can tell which are starting to moult by which are browsing there....except when they go through for the dryer areas to get the grasshoppers. Different grasses will develop slightly offset from each other. Adding in shrubs and trees that fruit small things (chokecherries, chokeberry, currants, grapes, blueberries, crabapples etc) make for mixed ripening times, variety to forage upon, shelter from assorted predators (never Fort Knox, but it helps) and utilizes spaces so they keep shifting about.A question for those who let their chickens forage but don’t have THAT much space (maybe @Shadrach, but the constraints there are more temporal): how do you know when they’ve pretty much cleaned out a patch? Bare soil, apparently not many invertebrates or seeds turning up when they scratch.
I’m planting cover crops to turn over for foraging, but it will be a good six weeks before they’re ready to be grazed.
A sanitary trim of feathers needed?We've had some blueberry feedback.I spent an hour yesterday cleaning Sylph's arse. It was a really disgusting mess. It's still not clean but I'm hoping I've cleaned enough for the congealed mucky wet stuff for the rest to dry off and then it will crumble off when rolled between the thumb and forefinger.
No more blueberries for a while.
Sylph's digestion does not deal with fruit well but she loves blueberries.
Mow is clean where it matters I'm pleased to write. She seems to have a high pressure vent.![]()