Aggiedusty
Songster
- Jan 29, 2020
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Tomatoes already, you must be in the Houston area or even further south. Up here we can’t plant tomatoes or peppers into after May 1 to be safe. But then they grow and fruit all summer into early fall up here. I lived in Dallas for 40 years and we had to push the season by planting in 3rd week February or 1st week March and then be ready to cover a couple of times. Otherwise the night temperatures would climb too high in late June to support tomatoe flower set and flowering. The night temperatures up in the south plains, altitude here in our area is 4000 ft +, for summer is usually in mid 60s give or take with a few nights in lower 70s. Dallas night temperatures by late June , if not late May, would be 82 or so. I did more winterizing of the chicken houses today. Shortly we will be going down below freezing tonight and not going above freezing until Wednesday afternoon. Snow chances pick up to 80% by 2:00 am and still at very high chances, 70-90% as far as hourly forecast will take me through tomorrow night at 10:00pm. Hey Allen K , I’m with you. I don’t tolerate unruly roosters. First time he hits me, I hit him back hard. If there’s a second strike he’s out of coop and into soup pot. Unruly and also high strung roosters have that in their genetic makeup. If I’ve tried to calm them and befriend them, as I do with all my chickens, and their actions continue they’re out. It effects the rest of the flock and they start to wonder if maybe they should be concerned as well and act accordingly. Don’t won’t those genes past down the line either. Same with our cattle herd. One wild one can make the rest act crazy. And it’s past down into their offspring’s genetic make up.Well Rod got himself "rehomed" yesterday as he ran out of last last last chances. My first cull of him was unsuccessful a week and a half ago. I knocked him unconscious for about 10 minutes and left him for dead to finish my morning feeding chores. Since then I thought he would learn but he didn't.
In other news got cherry tomatoes planted today, a purple passion flower and Dill for the herb garden. My original passion flower seeds never germinated even after doing the cold stratification for them. So I had to go to the store and buy one for 7.95 a clone from a mother plant. And I'll be cloning about a 400-foot row of this stuff for one of my 6 ft tall hurricane fences in the future. Thankfully purple passion flower is a horribly invasive and fast-growing vine which suits my needs.
Lucky is still with us and we still have three 1 1/2 week old chicks with their mothers. I imagine that's because we kept interrupting the Hawks and that kestrel every time we would hear an alarm call from the flock.