Wisconsin "Cheeseheads"

Home made pizza here, and I ate too much!
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My paint, you are making me sooo jealous! !

Thankfully hubbs is obsessed with snow removal. I rarely need to worry about a path!
today was definitely clean out the house day. Many toys and "stuff" went to the good will :)




Here is the toy room!


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Good evening. Hubby and I bought a cpl older sleds this winter. I KNEW we wouldn't get much snow because of that. The trails in our area were open for a total of two weeks. Went up to Price county at the end of January for an extended weekend. Had a very good time. So bring on warm weather.
I bought a small incubator recently. Set a few of my own eggs. We will see if any develop. Fingers crossed
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Do any of you think these are fertile? I thought so but am not sure. My chickens are not laying a lot right now but my two leghorns lay everyday without fail.

And here's a pic of our Siamese RWBY. (Pronounced Ruby. My 14 yr old is a big anime fan)
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Hopefully my family and I can make it to the Bash this year. It would be wonderful to meet you all.
 
I do not see the typical bulls-eye marking on the yolk that a fertile egg has, but there are others who have a better eye for those kinds of things.

No new here, just getting the odd bits together for the wedding in Chicago in three weeks....... hoping the weather improves in the next three weeks so we are not freezing!!!!
 
Welcome Apow! I am on a phone. So it os very hard fornme to see the bullseye in your pic. But I will attempt tonpost angood pic of one :)

Thanks Clucks. They are quite spoiled ;)
 
Hi All!

Apow... those eggs look ready to go to me. Pretty cat.

Nice play room. Wonder what it will look like this time next month. LOL

Guess that's it.... Night All!
 
For all you Wisconsin BYC'ers who also have gardens or have parents/grandparents who garden, do any of you grow or know of someone who grows "Mammoth" or "Mammoth Red" rhubarb? It's an old variety that in the early 1900's could be found all over Milwaukee and the surrounding area, as almost every backyard garden contained at least one plant. Since it is such an old variety, I'm guessing many of those who have it growing in their gardens today may not even call it by that name anymore...they may call it just "rhubarb" or maybe simply refer to it as just "the same rhubarb that my grandad used to grow," etc.. To differentiate it from other rhubarbs, the Mammoth (aka Mammoth Red) grows 4 to 5 feet tall with dark red stalks 4 inches in diameter, with giant leaves that chickens just love to hide under in the summertime.
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Anyway, just thought I'd pop in here and see if someone here could help me in my quest for it, or could maybe pass this on to a parent/grandparent/aunt/uncle/elderly neighbor, etc to see they know/remember anything about it (yeah, as you can probably tell, I'm kind of desperate, LOL). Thanks!
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