Showing posts with label eggs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eggs. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 26, 2018

The Adventures of Kari and Whitney...

Maybe you remember a post from back in April, where I lost my chickens to a fox...

Since then, our neighbor gave us two leghorn hens that she hatched in her animal science class at CTC.  She transported them in a cat carrier, they were that small, at only 8 weeks of age...



I named them Kari and Whitney, after her mom and aunt.  :)  Just for fun!

While I tried to figure out how to fortify the chicken pen and make it fox-proof, I penned them inside the shed with screens over the doors.  They still got lots of light, ventilation, and had plenty of room to explore. 

They were quite timid at first, and hid under the nesting boxes whenever I would come around.  They learned to flutter up and climb inside the nesting boxes to sleep. Sometimes I would find them huddled together in one box...


They're now about 14 weeks old, growing fast, and becoming braver.  They've begun venturing outside in search of bugs, grass and whatever chickens find to eat.  They also enjoy the watermelon and cantelope rinds that I've been putting in their pen.  Today the two of them devoured the rind of a watermelon in just a few hours!  If they keep eating like they are, and growing, in about 6 or 7 weeks, we should find some eggs!  It's going to look kind of strange to see white eggs...we've only ever had brown chickens and brown eggs.  Hopefully later this summer, we'll add a few more chickens...



Tonight when I mowed inside the pen, they actually stayed outside, and only ran inside when Phoebe barked at them.  (She would love to eat them, so we have to be super diligent to see that she never gets inside the pen!)


I snagged a huge pile of (free!) discarded fence posts and rails from the golf course across the road that is doing a lot of renovations, and lined the inside of the fence, in hopes that it will deter unwanted  critters, aka foxes, from getting inside...


The next thing is to catch the groundhog that has dug a hole underneath the shed.  There's always something!



Tuesday, April 17, 2018

What's Wrong With This Picture?...

This was my chicken pen this morning...

No chickens, and a hole dug under the fence...


I was away last evening, and when I got home around 10:30, I heard some clucking from the chicken pen.  Against my better judgement, I didnt investigate.

Hindsight is always 20/20.

I found lots of feathers and an empty pen this morning. I know it wasn't the dogs,  because I saw them sleeping in the barn when I came home!


I'm pretty sure this is the hole where the culprit entered the pen,  although the smaller hole might be from its offspring.

Jim saw a fox running in the fields the other day, so my guess is that she is now quite satisfied with herself.

And I will now have to buy eggs .

I declare war!

Wednesday, April 12, 2017

Gotcha...the Egg Thief...

I knew he was there.  I would forget to gather the eggs one day, and the next morning there would be nothing but a few broken egg shells under the "porch", next to a suspicious looking hole under the shed...

Now the thief has been caught...


Did you know that skunks like cat food?  That's what lured him in.  No more eggs for this guy!

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Surprise!...and A Mistake?...

Look what I found in the weeds of the chicken pen...


Surprise!

I wondered why I wasn't getting as many eggs lately. I counted over a dozen in that pile.

And now for "a mistake?"...


Not knowing how fresh they were, I just smushed them.  That's kind of fun, you know?  Stepping on eggs just for the fun of it!

However, I forgot how much chickens like to eat ANYTHING, and they swarmed the pile of goo immediately.  I hope they don't decide to break and eat their eggs on a daily basis!  They've been known to do that.

The moral of the story is...

Mow your weeds.

Friday, February 26, 2016

Friday's Hunt #9...

Friday's Hunt feels different this week...

I had in the last couple of months just begun connecting via Blogland with East Gwillimbury Camera Girl. She was a wonderful photographer, and  it was always fun to anticipate what her "starts with" pictures would be! She also left very kind comments on my blog.  She and her husband were tragically killed in a car accident in Ontario earlier this week. Although we never met, she will be missed!  Many thoughts and prayers are being lifted for their families and friends.

My photos aren't nearly as interesting as hers, but here is my interpretation of this week's prompts...

"Something blue" and "week's favorite" are the same this week...


I've been scrapbooking ever since Eric was a baby...and that's almost 20 years ago! In this digital age, I still like the process of putting photos in a book, and labeling them in my own handwriting. I've heard it referred to as modern day quilting.

Anyway, this is Eric's school album, which is almost finished! It's fun to look back at the first day of school...


...and it's interesting to see how scrapbooking styles have changed over the years too...


I spent most of today scrapbooking with a friend, and I'm happy to say that I hope to have his book finished this week!  Then it's time to get Jenna's book up to date.

"Starts with I"...

I don't often find eggs inside the nesting boxes! For some reason, my current chickens like to lay their eggs in the corner of the shed, in the straw. Oh well...


I hope you have a good weekend!


Monday, April 7, 2014

Real Free Ranging...

This is what happens when you let the chickens roam freely around the compost pile and the garden...

...and it just happens that the calf hutches are in the middle of it all...



I guess it looked and felt like a nesting box!

This is real free-ranging!


Monday, March 10, 2014

Housecleaning For the Chickens...

Oh happy day!

It's been a long time coming, and today, finally (!!) I was able to get the chicken shed cleaned out.  I last did it in the fall, and then the snow came.  I have to fork or shovel it out by hand into wheel barrows, and just couldn't get to it until the snow melted.  I lost track, but there were at least ten wheel barrow loads full.

It looks so much better...and smells much better too!  They had to scratch around in the fresh straw a little, just in case there were any seeds in the straw, or any goodies hiding underneath it, and then they headed outside again...


The last thing I cleaned out was the nesting boxes.  One chicken was frantically running around, looking for somewhere to lay her egg, I guess! She crawled into a box before I was finished, and was rather restless.  I carefully put some straw underneath her, and this is what she left me in return...


They spent most of the day outside in the warm sunshine.  (It's been a while since we've had weather like this!)  As you can see, the pen is rather barren looking.  I'm really hoping the grass will grow back in time...


To help save the grass in their pen...and to keep them happy...I left the chickens out this afternoon for a while.  They made a beeline for the compost pile to hunt for treasure...


They will scratch to their hearts' content until I feed the calves tonight.  Then, I'll have to find something to lure them back into their pen.  Maybe some spilled calf feed will do the trick.  For now, they're pretty cooperative, but once they get used to being outside, it gets a little tougher to lure them back inside.  That's when I need the kids to help me round them up.

So...this is how I spent my Monday.  How about you?

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Frozen Eggs...

Here's what happens if you don't gather the eggs quite in time when it's bitter cold...

This morning I didn't get to the chicken house early, to turn on the light like I usually do.  Instead, I went right to the barn and helped with the feeding while Jim milked.  After milking...and after feeding the hutch calves...I headed to the chicken pen with their warm water.  Apparently one girl couldn't wait until daylight to lay her egg, and it was frozen solid...cracked...


With this bitter cold weather we've been having, I have to gather the eggs pretty often to avoid freezing.

I decided to do an experiment, and see what happened when it thawed out. So...I took off the shell, and found this...


Pretty goofy looking, if you ask me.  I left it sit at room temperature for about an hour, and now it looks like this...


Pretty normal looking, if you ask me!

We sell most of our eggs, and one like this definitely wouldn't go into one of those boxes.  I use the ones that have thin shells... the smallest ones...and ones with small cracks in them.  I'll be baking cookies this afternoon, and I think this one will do just fine!

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Ouch...

Look what I found in the chicken pen this afternoon...

Did you ever see anything like this?


Ouch!  I'll bet that hurt!

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Sunday Morning Traffic Jam...

Traffic jams aren't reserved for the roads, apparently.

This was what I found when I fed the chickens this morning...


The bottom row is popular.  No matter that there are seven nesting boxes on the top!  As you can see, some chickens prefer the straw in the corner of the shed.  I left them alone, came back a little later, and found these...


Meanwhile, this group was diligently searching for any leftovers from the strawberry hulls that I tossed into the pen earlier.  I guess they'll lay their eggs later...


Egg count 22 by 8:00 am.  Thanks ladies!


Friday, April 26, 2013

Random 5 Friday...

It's Friday!  Of course, you knew that already!  Especially if you have school aged kids, you know just how exciting Fridays are!  They're looking forward to a couple of days off...to sleeping in tomorrow morning...

But oh...that's right...we're farmers, so Fridays don't matter!   :)

Saturday is just another day, with the same schedule.  We'll get our "time off" for a couple of hours on Sunday afternoon.

I'm joining up with Random 5 Friday today.  Here are five random thoughts from around the farm...

1.  I tried a couple of new things in the garden this year.  I made a raised bed out of some old pallets, and tucked an herb garden in the corner of my perennial bed close to the house.  I planted parsley, oregano, chives, cilantro, and basil.  It's too cold for the basil at night, so I've been covering it.  It was getting way too spindly in the house, so I gave it a shot.  The bed is pretty protected, and I'm hoping it won't get too cold...


I also planted my lettuce, cabbage and kale in these pallets (in the garden) to try to keep the weeds down.  For some reason, the weeds just love to take over these plants when I put them directly in the garden soil...


2.  We're down to our last four round bales of balage.  They will last us perhaps two weeks yet, and then we'll be feeding all dry hay to the cows. They'll be grazing as well, but by the time we're ready to bale first cutting of alfalfa, the hay mow will be getting empty...


3.  A few weeks ago, Jim "retired" our old New Idea manure spreader...


This is one of the few...perhaps the only...piece of brand new equipment that we bought.  Back in September of 1996, we purchased this manure spreader for $4850.  We spread manure every day, so Jim figured out the with the daily manure spreading, and cleaning out heifer pens several times a year for 16 1/2 years, that his trusty old spreader has hauled between 6500 - 7000 loads of manure!  The web has been replaced several times, and routine maintenance has been done, but it's now been replaced by a used, and slightly larger one. This old spreader owed us nothing!  It will be a great spreader for someone who has a few steers, or some horses, but it's daily, heavy work is over.

4.  My chickens are laying eggs like crazy again, now that the days are getting longer.  We lost some customers over the winter to our Amish neighbors, because we didn't have light in our chicken shed.  Now we have to build up a customer base again.  Three dozen eggs per day is a few more than we need...


5. My fern leaf peony's blooms are just about to open!  I got this flower from a lady at Church a bunch of years ago, and it's cheery blooms are one of the first to open...


This was fun...I hope you enjoyed it too!

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Pullets...

We've added some new members to our "family"...

I ordered some new pullets for this spring, and I got the call last week that they were ready to be picked up.  Thirty, sixteen -week-old Red Sex Links have come to live with us...


For the first week, they hung out in the shed all day long.  I went in to their pen every day...to feed them of course...and they gradually got used to seeing me around.  Now when they see me, they come running! (maybe my coveralls say "she's got food!" on them)

The past few days, they've been spending a lot more time outside, getting used to their surroundings...and getting used to the dog.  Do you see Murphy laying in the garden just on the other side of the fence?


They enjoy taking dust baths in the holes that the previous "tenants" made in the dirt...



After the "new" girls have adjusted even better to their new home,  I'll put the old and young chickens together in the large pen.  The "old" girls are beginning to lay again, now that the daylight hours are lengthening.  I was pleased to find nine eggs from twelve chickens one day this week!

On Sunday, Jenna found the first pullet egg, a tiny double yolker!  Today I found two more...



They are so tiny compared to the much larger eggs that were laid by my old Barred Rock hens, and look at the difference in their colors. It won't take long until their eggs are as big as...if not bigger than...the others.

I won't sell them until they're bigger, so until then, we'll likely be eating lots of scrambled eggs!




Thursday, December 15, 2011

Which Would You Choose...

I had to buy some store-bought eggs today for hard boiling, and just for comparison's sake...



Some of these brown beauties of ours are actually on the small side!  (That's a Jumbo sized box)
So...which would you choose?  Just wondering!

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Pullet Eggs...

Have you ever seen pullet eggs?

Two weeks ago we acquired fifteen new chickens...pullets...eighteen week old layers.  They've spent the past two weeks adjusting to their new surroundings and establishing themselves in the pecking order.  They're still a bit camera shy...


...and now they've begun laying their first eggs.  I put one of the eggs that our older chickens are laying in the basket beside the pullet eggs to show the size difference...


They've got to be some of the cutest looking eggs...complete with a yolk and a white, just like a "regular" egg, but in miniature form!  In a few short weeks, they'll be laying with the big girls, and I expect that we'll get a few double yolkers in the mix. That's always a fun surprise!

Welcome, ladies!  I hope you're enjoying your new home!


Linking up to Farm Friend Friday and Farm Girl Friday!

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Cock-a-doodle-doo...

Our hens finally have a rooster!

He's beautiful... 

He likes to sit on the fence, looking out for his ladies...

He's quiet...

He doesn't eat much...

He never chases anyone...

He's the nicest rooster I've ever met...




You see...he's made of copper!

When I was a girl, we had a banty rooster.  A nasty banty rooster!  He would chase us, and jump onto our heads, flogging us with his wings and his spurs!  There are lots of stories of this rooster and his eventual demise!

So...no live roosters for us! 

Our 89 year old neighbor made this rooster out of copper, and we placed him on his perch just this afternoon.  He can proudly look after his harem, and we can safely gather eggs!

Cock-a-doodle-doo!

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Photo gallery from the past year...

It's that time of year...we're in our slow mode...and if I don't keep myself motivated, I can waste a lot of time! 

I'd like to think, though, that blogging is NOT a waste of time...so I've compiled a collection of pictures from the past year that I found interesting. 

 Some of them are directly related to farming, some of them are of family, and some of them are just beautiful scenery.  (Some may be repeats from earlier blog posts, but if you see them twice, you know I really like them!)

Enjoy!


2010 began with a bang!  In February we had two major snow storms a week apart, resulting in 40+ inches of snow...




Our neighbor's farm to the west always makes a great photo, no matter the weather...

Several years ago Jim bought a Honda 50 dirtbike like he rode when he was a kid.  Last winter he found a Honda 100, so now the kids each have a dirt bike to ride.  They use them for fun and for work...


Spring arrived, like always, and I was thrilled...



These particular chickens loved to sit on top of the fence around their pen...



Of course there was also work to do...my nephew from Chicago loved gathering eggs...


And Murphy blessed us with nine adorable puppies...but they wore her out!  They were born in June, during one of the hottest weeks of the year...


Our neighbor Joe came over every day to see them...



The laundry never ended...



Some beautiful scenes shot by Jenna...




And then of course there was some more work...baling round bales...Jim drove the tractor while the Amishman who owns the baler rode behind and operated the mechanism that released the bale into the field...




Fun...it doesn't take alot to be entertained...





We just can't seem to get away from those cows!   (photo by Jenna)



More "real" work...Eric unloading hay...



The east hay mow is almost full...


Jim's dad on his old (1950 something) Ferguson 30, just before he sold it...he used to use it for cleaning out pens...



After a dry summer, we had a LONG day of rain...over 8 inches of rain...(I forgot to empty the rain gauge before bed, so we aren't sure just how much we had, but it was a lot!)



We chopped corn the next day, and left no tracks in the field or mud on the driveway!  The ground was thirsty...



And there's our neighbors' farm again...taken out the west barn windows...




We found a little time to play...we spent an afternoon picnicking with friends at a park...


Fall work was upon us...combining corn, and loads of corn fodder waiting to be unloaded...




My dad repaired our cow trailer...he doesn't look 81, does he?!



This is where the dogs hang out while we're milking...right under our feet...


And this is where Slinky the cat hangs out...high above the dogs...


Self-service balage...or so they think!


Me and my next-oldest sister...Look behind us...I just can't get away from those cows!



And I couldn't let this one out.  We all gathered after Christmas to watch my brother in law start his old 1936 John Deere D that he, with some help from my Dad, restored.  It started up, he whooped and hollered, we cheered, and he's still grinning!  This one's for you, Marty!



And to round out the year, here's another picture of the sunrise on New Year's Day 2011...



Thanks for humoring me...do you have any favorites?