Showing posts with label chickens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chickens. Show all posts

Friday, April 20, 2012

Killer Chicken houses!

Backyard chickens are in!  Along with popularity comes some ingenious ways of keeping chickens in style. 
Some folks have ideas that just beg to be shared.

The Poop Coop by All Cooped Up



You can’t help but smile.



Some can easily tuck in along the back fence.  I love the little chandelier painted inside, just a touch of elegance.

Chalet Souffle housing Poppy, Petunia, Myrtle and Iris, the Poulet Bouquet.



Use what you have, a good motto and why not, this old school bus makes a good size chicken house.  I guess you could get away with this on the back forty but it may not work for the more urban dweller.

School bus chicken house.



This one is called High Class Chicken coop.  It is certainly colorful.  I like the pink screen door and picket fence to gussy up the pen area.



The Fancy Farm Girl put a real chandelier in her Fancy Smancy chicken house.  No hen spoiling here!



Can you believe Williams-Sonoma has jumped on the backyard chicken band wagon?  I’m tellin’ ya, chickens are mainstream now. 

Alexandria Chicken Coop, Green

But this one has got to be my favorite.  Follow the link, the builder kindly shared his step by step of building this oh so cool chicken house.

Poultry in Motion



If you are thinking of starting your own backyard chicken flock here is a few great links for info.

The City Chicken

The Urban Chicken

Backyard Chickens

My Pet Chicken

Then of course, there is the Chicken Whisperer. He even has his own radio show.
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Go figure!

As chicken keeping grows and grows in popularity I am sure I will have to share more fantastic coops in the future.  So check back!


mllsp58asignaturePamelamllsp50a



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Sunday, March 4, 2012

My Pet Project

Spring definitely feels like it is on its way today.  We have bright warm sunshine (which is swiftly melting the snow) and 60 degrees. 
Spring (for me) means “chicks”! 

I am always interested in the new and interesting when it comes to chickens, I had recently spotted a ‘new to me’ variety on the internet.  They are called Swedish Flower hens and they just caught my eye.  click here to see photos of them

This year I have invested in an incubator with high hopes of hatching the little darlings myself. 

I started with a smaller incubator that will hold 7 chicken eggs.  It will automatically turn the eggs for me so I don’t have to think about it.  


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The incubator arrived first, then a week or so later here came my box of eggs.  It was so warm here when the order was placed, then what do you know, the first storm we have had in a long while is at the same time as the egg shipment.   I made sure to track them so I could  rush to the Post Office and pick them up.

I was so excited to see this box when the Post Master handed it to me.   

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I am not the only one getting ready for Spring with chicks, I heard a lot of chirping in the background at the post office.  Someone was getting some new babies. 
When I opened my box the eggs were very well packed and not one broke.

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So that is what I have in my incubator now, I just hope they did not get too chilled in transit.  We are counting down.  19 more days to go.  

You know I will share when (if) I get any to hatch.  We’ll have a party!

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Thursday, February 2, 2012

A Short Walk in the Garden

It is the first of the month and it is time to see what is happening (or not) in the garden. 

Here we go…

First thing I spot is some Larkspur seedlings popping up, the ground is frosty from our 32 degree night, but they persist in coming up.

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Some Blue Star Creeper Groundcover hiding beneath some pine needles.

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Volunteer Shirley poppies taking over the Japanese Maple in this pot. I should separate them out…. or not…

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This photo turned out so dark, not sure why but this is a climbing rose, Dream Weaver, I do believe, and it is budding very early.  This is the warm side of the house. I just hope a hard freeze does not strike and burn the new growth. 

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My favorite Clematis at the moment, called Warsaw Nike, it is also sprouting new growth. 

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My Hydrangea is loaded with fat and sassy buds. 

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Meet one of my ladies, this is the lone Black Copper Maran hen I ended up with after adopting 5 straight run chicks (my hope was to end up with mostly hens).  Yep I had to find homes for 4 Roosters, they were lovely but noisy.

Her name is Lady Maran, she thinks she is nobility, she expects preferential treatment and though one of the youngest of the hens does not let anyone push her around.  She is a pretty girl.

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I also need to announce my winner of the My Memories software.  I totally forgot about it.  Blame it on my total absorption in getting our tax documents sorted and paperwork filled out. 

The winner is Bettie, she entered via email which is very convenient since that makes it easy to contact her!

Enjoy the visit to my garden this first week of February.  I will do another in a couple weeks.  We shall see how things have progressed. 

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I am joining a
Walk in the Gardens

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Thursday, May 26, 2011

5 Reasons to Raise Chickens: Organic Gardening

strawberry
As many of you know I have chickens.  20 hens and 3 roosters to be exact but I will soon find homes for 2 of the roosters.  I so enjoyed this article in my Organic Gardening newsletter about the benefits of having your own backyard chickens I wanted to share.  The link for the entire article is at the bottom.

I got a kick out of Belgium giving chickens to homeowners!

5 Reasons to Raise Chickens

Backyard hens not only provide high-quality eggs, but also serve as master gardeners, organic pest exterminators, and unpaid city workers.


RODALE NEWS, EMMAUS, PA—After the massive egg recall, you're were probably left pondering egg carton claims in search of the healthiest eggs. One surefire solution: raising a handful of your own backyard chickens, giving you complete control over egg quality. Home-raised chickens may not be an option for everybody, but they are more of an option than you may think. Even if you live in the city, once you realize the myriad benefits a small flock of three or more hens can provide, you'll start thinking of your non-chicken-keeping neighbors as the strange ones. "Most people are going to get chickens because they love eggs, but then they're going to find out how useful they are in other ways," says Patrician Foreman, author of City Chicks: Keeping Micro-flocks of Chickens as Garden Helpers, Compost Makers, Bio-reyclers, and Local Food Producers (Good Earth Publications, 2010).

Of course, you should first figure out if you have what it takes to own a chicken, which Foreman says falls in between raising a dog and a cat in terms of difficulty. Generally speaking, you should be able to take care of a small flock of chickens in a few minutes a day, less time than it takes you to take your dog on a decent walk.

Which isn't to say there's not a lot to learn. We can't even begin to detail all of the information crammed into Foreman's 459-page ultimate guide to raising urban chickens, ranging from lobbying your local government to make raising an urban micro-flock legal, and from choosing location-appropriate breeds and raising day-old chicks to feeding guidelines and coop design ideas. But we can tell you that Foreman lays out a strong argument for keeping a small flock on the premises (she suggests six to 10 feet of coop space per bird for a micro-flock).

Here are five reasons why chickens belong in the city:

#1. Urban chickens as bargain-basement backyard city workers.

Foreman concludes that the most economic and politically compelling reason to keep hens is to recycle food and yard waste, therefore keeping it out of landfills as it composts into an invaluable organic soil builder for your garden. The idea is that you feed your chickens kitchen scraps, they poop out a nitrogen-rich fertilizer, and you compost it with leaves and other untreated yard waste.

In fact, in Belgium, one city is actually giving three laying hens to 2,000 homes in an effort to reduce landfill costs. City officials expect to recover a significant portion of the $600,000 a year the city spends on dealing with this type of household "trash." According to Foreman, a single chicken can biorecycle about seven pounds of food residuals in a month. If just 2,000 households raise three hens, it could divert 252 tons of waste from landfills annually.

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#2. City chickens as a backyard organic exterminating service.

Chickens love to eat protein-packed insects, which works out well because they can serve as the organic pest-cleanup crew in your garden and devour ticks on your property. They also love to eat many weeds, and serve as post-harvest garden bed gleaners, potentially making your work as a gardener very, very easy.

#3. Urban chickens as soil savers.

The health of our food is tied directly to the health of our soil. And chickens perform multiple functions that can turn parts of our boring old yards into fertile garden patches. Their natural scratching and digging tendencies serve them well and can help you create top-notch garden beds. They are expert in mixing manure with mulch to create raised beds, which allow you to grow more produce in a smaller space and use less water, which is particularly useful to urban gardeners. They also act as gasoline-free, noise-free tillers, mixing the top layers of soil with compost or other mulches. (OK, they're not completely noise-free, but hens sure do make cute noises, adding entertainment value for the whole family!)

#4. Heritage-breed city chickens as an extinction-prevention task force.

Because factory-farm operations prefer pretty much the same type of high-volume laying breeds (or in the case of meat, heavy, fast-growing meat birds), the preservation of rare, heritage breeds is threatened. If we lose these beautiful breeds, we wipe out genetic material from a species, perhaps losing genes that could save the poultry industry one day if the standard production breeds fall susceptible to illness. To learn more about heritage breeds, check out What's the Best Chicken for You.

#5. Urban chickens as antidepressants.

Ever hear of oxytocin, the love hormone? It's a stress-lowering chemical in your body that's unleashed when you hug someone you love, or even pet your dog or cat. And anyone who has raised backyard chickens can probably contend the same effect holds true for hens. Believe it or not, Foreman says, there are actually hens employed as therapy chickens! That's something to cluck about!

5 Reasons to Raise Chickens: Organic Gardening





Monday, May 9, 2011

Just checking in.

We had a lovely weekend even if Sunday turned out cloudy and cold. 

Saturday was warm even if the breeze had a coolness to it. That just made it more comfortable to work outside.  I weeded the front flowerbed and decided to plant my broccoli there. It gets great morning sun then when it is hotter in the afternoon it gets the shade.  We shall see how the broccoli plants like it there.  I have a small lot so I must make the best use of space that I can.

This is the before…

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Yes, my front yard looks a bit shabby still. 

My husband was helping me Saturday by hauling wheelbarrow loads of compost from one spot to another and he perused the homeliness of this front space and asked with a disdainful curl to his lip, ”Does it always look like this at this time of year or is this year particularly bad?” 

It does look bad this year but you would too if you had 6 feet of snow sitting on top of you for several months!

He is more used to it looking like this, and this is not really up to par. 

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This is my broccoli in the ground.  It is small and if the deer will leave it alone it will fill in fast(note hoof print in ground, already, and I am missing a broccoli plant) , also we need the sun to warm back up.  We had starting temps in the mid-30’s this morning…brrr. Last week it stayed in the 40’s at night.

broccoli

So slowly I am getting the yard tidied.  I cut back my broken down Butterfly Bush, it should recover quite nicely.  My tulips out front are starting to bloom and so are my Hyacinths. 

My tomatoes in the greenhouse are more than ready to be planted, but I must wait until after the 3rd weekend of May.  Our last projected frost date.  Lots of Brandywines, some Marzano’s, Camp Joy cherry and my favorite sauce tomato, Costoluto Genovese.

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My English Delphiniums are coming along, I have only lost one seedling and that was my own fault, it dried out and keeled over. 

When I get so many plants going in my greenhouse some get overlooked.  I need to get rid of what I am not keeping then it will be more manageable.  Plus it got fairly warm last week, 2 days it hit 80 degrees here so it really heated up in the greenhouse. 

This is one of the mixed colors but my blue ones I started a couple weeks after these are catching up quickly.

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The chicks are getting big, the 4 to the right are the Black Copper Marans and the 2 on the left are the Welsummers.  All lay the darker brown eggs.  I can’t wait until they start to lay to see how dark.  Of course, some of the Black Copper Marans may well be roosters.  I know one is as he is noticeably more aggressive than the others. 

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I now have them in the pen with the older hens. I only keep them cordoned off so the big hens do not eat their special food and visa versa. 

DSC_0005You can see the fencing separating them in the background where the green waterer is

I have let the hens out a couple days this last week to forage and scrounge for worms, they love pecking the green sprouts (be gone weeds!) and roaming.  I keep an eye out for local dogs (I need my yard fenced), coyotes or other chicken killin’ critters!

I was thrilled to see that not all my Raspberry Ripple geraniums were taken out by a weird fungus.  This one survived, thankfully.  I love the fun sprinkles on the bloom.

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Yesterday afternoon I tested the Chalk Paint I want to use on my potting bench. 

I am painting a sign using the leftover cedar fence boards from building our potting bench and I base painted it with the Old White and some of the Country Gray.
I have to say I am already loving it. 

 Karen at Classic Wall Finishes explained to me that the Chalk Paint weathers beautifully outside with no protective finish, like wax or the varathane I use.  I am anxious to see how that does go.  I will only use the paint on my potting bench with no other product and give it a test run. 

Well, today I need to get all my shopping and errand running done.  I have a large order of signs on my docket and I need some painting supplies.  I need to make out the weeks menu so meals are easy and I can be sure to have all ingredients on hand then the rest of the week I can focus on painting. 

Happy Monday!
signaturePamela

To see my signs just click the photo below, it is a link to my website.


Farmgirl Friday Blog Hop

Thursday, April 28, 2011

A hen party!

Hello All, it has been a busy day.  We had sun but a chill breeze was blowing.  My hens were anxious for a little scratching and pecking in the back yard so I let them out of their pen. They were in chicken heaven scratching up worms and gobbling them down. 

Oh yum, dandelion, my favorite!!
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Woo hoo, look at all that green stuff..which they soon till under with their scratching.  Weeds be gone, and I didn’t have to lift a finger!

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I had a tough time getting clear shots, they were moving so fast, you would think they had not been fed in a month of Sundays!

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If we do end up having to move, I sure hope I can find a place where I can keep my chickens!  I enjoy them too much to give them up easily. 

I have been working on the post for the step by step building of the potting bench.  There is a lot of photos.  I think I will have to break it up into a couple blog posts.

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I have been reading a bit on photographing food.  It is something I had never really thought about before, but we (my husband and I) love to cook together and thought we could share some recipes here and there.  You all get to be our guinea pigs while I learn how to photograph and present step by step or close to it of whipping up our favorites!

Can you guess what this is?? It will be one of my first attempts at sharing a recipe with you.

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I am winding down now.  It has been a long day.  I have quite a few orders for signs to paint and I base painted, cut out shapes and varathaned a few today.   I worked at that until dinner time.

After dinner, as a treat to myself I got out and cleaned up one of the raised beds in the back yard, worked the soil a bit with my Hoe-Dag (love that thing) and planted some lettuce and sugar snap peas.

If you are wondering what a Hoe-dag is go to the link below. I have no affiliation with Hoe Dag, I just love the one I have.

http://www.hoedag.com/

I checked my seedlings in my greenhouse and by then it was 8pm.  I love the long evenings.  Tomorrow is more sunshine but it is still to be a bit chilly with some North winds blowing.  By next week we should FINALLY be in the 70’s here.  I am too tired or I would happy dance!

Good night all…sleep well.  Tomorrow is a new day! 
signaturePamela

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