
From the form of the bill's root i am 70% sure its a drake. The root of the bill looks a bit triangular shaped and a bit thicker.
But i could be wrong…
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
50% chance it's a drake. Or a hen.Sweet a honey! - Note the little egg-tooth at the end of the bill! - That will disappear with in a day or two.
From the form of the bill's root i am 70% sure its a drake. The root of the bill looks a bit triangular shaped and a bit thicker.
But i could be wrong…
High-humidity phase??! - With my CCI there is nothing like a "high-humidity phase" and still all ducklings that made it to the internal-pip hatched out. Some with help, some by force.Well in that case it's a very good thing I decided to start the high humidity phase a bit early... Had I started even earlier maybe all of the ducklings that attempted hatching so far would have made it.
Imho charging six dollars for a single tomato plant is outrageous.This price seems very good. Slovenia has a much smaller average income than the US and when word got around I tend to grow large numbers of tomato plants people came to the door asking to buy. I was not ready for that so I just said well whatever you think is appropriate... And it was 2 EUR usually.
It is called »Tundra Sweetberry Edible Honeysuckle - Haskap«Oh good, what cultivar is it?
I used my patio to grow the plants, this year just covered with cheap shower-curtains from the tropical river and some fake-grass carpet. It was leaking in cold air like a survival-shelter and i lost several batches of seedlings during the coldest nights.Those are very reasonable prices.
Maybe I'll start doing that next year, if I manage to get a greenhouse going. Between me, three cats, a large dog, two incubators and various brooders full of bird babies, I don't have room in the trailer to grow plants!
![]()
It is called »Tundra Sweetberry Edible Honeysuckle - Haskap«![]()
No idea what that means, but it was the last available plant:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07NPWKGM3
And i had good experiences with that seller in the past, obtained the gooseberries and currants from them.
Oh, this would be glorious... Can't do that here because of the high water table.I would love to build a large sunken greenhouse with a wood-stove as heat-source, but that requires a lot of sold plantlings…
Don't have a patio or deck. And I have the same problem with level ground, PLUS having to deal with the Canadian Shield (barely any topsoil over the rock). Digging *anything* is a pain!I used my patio to grow the plants, this year just covered with cheap shower-curtains from the tropical river and some fake-grass carpet. It was leaking in cold air like a survival-shelter and i lost several batches of seedlings during the coldest nights.
A greenhouse is my dream and it is not too difficult to build one, but: I have no flat-land available here!That means either digging (no excavator available!) or building a platform with an insulated floor.
If selling plants looks like an opportunity, my plan is to improve the patio: Installing storm-doors, laying out insulation foam and osb on the floor and trying to get my hands on some used windows from the ReStore to improve insulation. And more LED shop-lights…
I would love to build a large sunken greenhouse with a wood-stove as heat-source, but that requires a lot of sold plantlings…
"A very small number of birds incubate their eggs for longer than 70 days: the wandering albatross (Diomedea exulans), for 75–82 days; the royal albatross (D. epomophora), for 75–81 days; and the kiwis (family Apterygidae), for 71–84 days.""Hatching time varies from 36–45 days for ostrich eggs, 46–56 days for emu eggs, and 36–44 days for rhea eggs."
Seems legit...