By the time I took it out they'd made a hole through the back and at the base of the stem tooI love it!! Look at how creepy that pumpkin looks![]()

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By the time I took it out they'd made a hole through the back and at the base of the stem tooI love it!! Look at how creepy that pumpkin looks![]()
Yeah, I figured if I gave it to them for too long that I would just have a giant hole in the center of those tiny pumpkins! Hahaha. Bigger pumpkins next year!By the time I took it out they'd made a hole through the back and at the base of the stem tooThink next year I'll give it to them just one day ahead.
No. All of my kids are old enough for grand kids now. The 2 great grands that are near me I sure went with their parents right in their small rural town neighborhood. I hope they send pictures. Granddaughter is an accomplished seamstress.Did you go trick or treating?![]()
I saved the seeds from our pie pumpkins this year. Squash need crazy amounts of water here but hoping the little pumpkins will be easier. Not so good for chicken carving but still good treats.I intend to grow a small patch of pumpkins with chicken feed in mind. I can start giving them to practice on early. I'm willing to bet my sharp beaked Dark Cornish girls and do a number on a large pumpkin.
Less water required if you have a way to mulch them heavily so the only water needed is for the pumpkin and not the sun and/or weeds. I'm saving paper feed sacks to mulch with. I also have well water that doesn't cost near as much as county water.I saved the seeds from our pie pumpkins this year. Squash need crazy amounts of water here but hoping the little pumpkins will be easier. Not so good for chicken carving but still good treats.
My chickens love their garden scraps. Great low maintenance ones here are sweet potato, grape vines (my grapes are a native species and grows fast all summer), minari (think this is also called Chinese celery...water plant though), water cress, oregano, basil and perilla. The minari and watercress I grow in bucket ponds. The sweet potato, grapes, oregano and perilla come back on their own so no need to plant them annually. Just water and harvest. All of those grow more then we can eat and I trim them back a little at a time as bird treats.Way back in the 70's I would buy 150 bales of wheat straw to mulch the following years garden with. I picked it up in the field myself. Wire tie heavy bales. 50¢ a bale. Now it's over $5 a bale for light weight string tied bales.There is another option and that is a porous type of black plastic that is bio degradable. One kind is made form corn starch. I've got some of that to try next year. I am looking for ideas on other things I can grow for the chickens and maybe some of it for us at the same time. They get the ugly protein added buggy stuff. At this point I really don't know what they can safely eat out of a garden.