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Welcome back Blooie, I am so happy that Linda is doing well. Will continue to keep her in my prayers. It is still a long road for her recovery. With the sense of humor that seems to run in you family, she has a great chance at a full recovery. Laughter is really the best medicine.Hon-eeeeys, I'm hoooo-oome!
Short story - DH was running a road construction job in the middle of the state. They had 3 contractors working, he had 2 young engineers and 3 summer interns helping do the "observation" They discovered the cheese factory 1/2 mile from the job. Being engineers, they actually set up a schedule of who's turn it was to pick up the fresh curds at 11:08 on Thursday. Not 11:00.\, not 11:15, but 11:08 exactly. And they always got there just as they were bagging them up. They were still warm. Those guys ate 8 pounds every week! granted they shared them with everyone on the job. But he never brought me any. : (Very cool! So I don't have to tell you about cheese curds and to make sure to find out what days the nearest cheese factory makes them, right?We load up every time we head north to visit. I used to deer hunt north of 8 near Tony WI (western part of the state). So pretty up there. Your new home and property look beautiful!!![]()
It was DH who was exploring the new property and got stuck in the field. He used the z-turn to haul the floor jack and lumber out to the Tahoe to get it unstuck. No pulling with the Z-turn, just the only other piece of equipment with wheels and a motor that he has available. Had to get lumber out there somehow. he dug enough to get a board and the jack under the truck, then jacked it up and put boards under the wheels. 4-wheel drive and managed to get it out. Park it in the driveway, then walk back across the 25 acres to get the mower.I might have missed the original 'problem'. Are you saying your DH buried the Tahoe or the people you bought the place from had done so?
Bad idea in either case. And I would watch the transmission on that Z turn. They aren't made for towing even grass collectors.
I'm very happy with my saddle nipples in PVC pipe. Don't really need a 5 gallon bucket of water hanging in the coop. There will always be some water dripped out of the nipples because the birds don't catch every drop. Don't need that in middle of the coop either. I have an old chicken trough feeder (I think) attached to the wall under the nipple pipe to catch the drips. No mess in the coop filling the 5 gallon cooler outside the coop that feeds the pipe.
I will wave in the general direction of your new place next week when we go through, once Tuesday, again Wednesday. Picking up the younger daughter at Beloit College. Drive through Canada is longer but a LOT more pleasant than the 'southern' route on I/90. Went that route when we took her to school last August, stopped to see Niagara Falls on the way. Wife decided going through Chicago once was more than enough times so we came back through Sault Ste Marie. Good thing we hadn't booked hotels yet!
Bruce
It was DH who was exploring the new property and got stuck in the field. He used the z-turn to haul the floor jack and lumber out to the Tahoe to get it unstuck. No pulling with the Z-turn, just the only other piece of equipment with wheels and a motor that he has available. Had to get lumber out there somehow. he dug enough to get a board and the jack under the truck, then jacked it up and put boards under the wheels. 4-wheel drive and managed to get it out. Park it in the driveway, then walk back across the 25 acres to get the mower.
I thing I understand about the saddle-nipples, but if you gat a chance could you snap a picture for me. I am trying to plan for my coop and I like the idea of being able to water from outside the coop
When you go through the split of Hwy 141 and Hwy 41, you are within 3 miles of the place. I will have DH wave!
I love it when they do that!What you got under these broodies, LJ? More Dels?
Okay, dilemma here. I want to keep the girls' (and Charlie's) food and water outside in the run. I'd like the coop to be nothing more than a place for them to sleep and lay eggs. I currently have 22 but several of them will be heading to freezer camp. How can I set up a feeding system that feeds several of them at one time and still keeps the food dry? I've been poking around since I finished unpacking and all I managed to do was confuse myself.
While I don't wish to deal with a fox wanting to eat my birds, part of me would love to have a fox fur. I'd probably use it to train my dogs to keep them out since they've never encountered them before (though my dogs are pretty good about dealing with predators anyway). Have you checked your local shelters/sanctuaries for puppies? There are always loads of young dogs available and they aren't very pricey. Training a young pup to protect the property/flock is something you'd have to do anyway and this way, you save another animal from being euthanized. I checked on PetFinder and it looks like there are loads of great pups that would likely be great flock-protectors if trained correctly. One looked really promising and he's located in Batavia, OH.Hello Bee. Here is a pic of a fox that we caught in the snare trap. My DH went to check the traps and found it snared by it's foot. DH had to shoot it. Also it had the 1 hen that escaped from the coop this morning. We have been leaving them in the chicken coops until we can be home to watch them. This hen is #7 this week that we have lost to the fox or foxes. I'm looking into finding a guard dog, but it doesn't look like there are any pups or young ones available around here that I can afford anyway. I have a friend that is going to breed her GP/Maremma mixed soon, but it won't be in time. In the meantime, hoping the traps will take care of them. I'm hoping this is the one that has been doing all the pilfering!!I really dislike having to keep my flock cooped up all day, especially on these warm sunny days!
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