Monday, January 19, 2009

EGGS!



The happy day has finally come - our hens are laying. My wife discovered 4 eggs this morning by our AC condenser. I think the two dark ones are from the Cuckoo Marin/Aracauna cross. I'd like to get them to start laying in the coop, but I have to build some nest boxes first.

Coming soon: Landscape additions. We got some plants to test from a wholesale nursery, so we'll be digging up the yard this weekend.

Friday, December 12, 2008

Dog Kills Chicken - Redux

A sad day in our Alamo Garden. My wife called me at work and said only, “I need you at home”. I could tell she was upset, so I didn't question. "I'll be there in 15 minutes."

I arrived to find that in the single hour the dogs had been left alone in the back yard, they tore feathers out of two chickens and maimed one to near death. Sonya put a chick down once, and vows never to do it again (it didn't go well). So, I dispatched the hen, and cleaned up the mess.

Now, killing a chicken - not such a big deal, but this was the culmination of a string of events that in retrospect went on too long, and lead to a much more troubling event.

•This was the third chicken the dogs had killed.

•A week before this, I came home to find blood and poop everywhere - the dogs had attacked our new cat. This cat is pretty tough - the poop was his so he obviously was in a fight for his life, but the blood was Bleu's. The cat came out of it all unharmed; Bleu with scratches all over his face.

•A month or so before that attack, I was working outside when I heard the girls screaming (or so I thought) and the dogs going crazy. Fearing the worst, I ran inside and found Bleu attacking the cat (it was the cat screaming). No verbal commands worked - I had to stomp kick him to get him off.

•And, before all the other attacks on chickens and cats, our other dog, Max, bit my oldest daughter in the face. He didn't break the skin, but there are still some broken capillaries where it happened. It was a revenge/dominance thing, because my mother-in-law had scolded him for knocking her down. She was about 2 and we had a new baby, so Max was a little upset.

After an unhappy few days, my wife and I decided to put the dogs to sleep. They were becoming dangerous. For a long time, they wouldn't obey any adult but my wife and I, and now it was only my wife. These were big dogs and we worried that they would attack a child next. A few years ago we worked with a trainer to overcome some behavior issues. It was a fantastic success, but as they got older they were becoming a little crazy and we did not have the time to continually train them. They were pretty old, so we had no hope of anyone adopting them.

My wife had owned them since before we were married (10-12 years) so she took it pretty hard. Fortunately, the more time that has passed since we had them put down, the more obvious it is that we made the correct decision. Several of our neighbors have told us that they worried as they walked their dogs by our house, because our dogs would throw themselves at the window. Also, a house guest we had told us that the dogs had attacked the cat while he was there, and that they wouldn’t listen to him. Now we look back and think we should have done it a lot sooner. We tolerated a level of danger to our daughters, and other people that I wouldn’t tolerate now. It’s always easier to assess a situation when you aren’t in it.

One of our cats wandered off to die recently, too. She was really old and had survived severe injuries 3 times! Hit by a car once, attacked by coyotes twice. She was one tough cat. If you looked up “nine lives” in the dictionary there would be a picture of Nutmeg. The vet who treated her last injuries (coyote) joked that if you put two parts of her bones in the same room they would heal. She knew her way around and never got lost outside in all her 22 years, so we are certain that she left to find a quite place to die.

Well, enough about death already. Now, we have an elderly, grumpy black cat, Daisy, and a feisty young whippersnapper with the most amazingly smooth, sleek coat I’ve ever felt on a cat, Mr. Man. And a fish. I can’t remember the fish’s name, but it is one of the characters from Finding Nemo. Dori I think. And 3 chickens: Violet, Babs, and SeƱorita MacPhee.

No eggs yet. Moochers.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

More Chickens

To start our Texas adventure out, we got more chickens. We started off with 4 Ameracauna chicks Senorita MacPhee, Kari, Babs, and Violet:

Something ate Violet(probably the dog. again), so we're down to 3:

Zoinks! Senorita MacPhee and Babs turn out to be cockerels! After 2 weeks of croaky crowing at 5 AM, we trade them for an Ameracauna/Cuckoo Marin mix unconfusingly named --- Violet.

Then we drive 50 miles to pick up a Rhode Island and a Barred Rocks. But its a crazy place - there are about 100 chickens in a big pen all de-beaked! We never heard of such a thing. Horrid practice. We took them anyway, mostly because we were kind of in shock. If I had a clearer head I would've said 'No, thank you Mr. Crazy Chicken Debeaker.' Anyway, they're doing all right. One of them has a little trouble eating, so she's kind of thin. To keep the naming clear we just use the same names over again, so we're back up to 4 chickens: Senorita MacPhee, Babs, Kari, and Violet.

Thursday, August 21, 2008

New Name

After two years, I've decided to start back up to document the new things I'm up to.

We have a new house, new city, new state, new chickens!, and lots of new ideas to do around the home.

I'll still feature info from other places, since I don't think pictures of my house are really going to entertain people.

C

Friday, February 10, 2006

Chicken Saga VII


This is Mulan, our latest chicken. She is a Silkie. They do not have functioning barbicels on their feathers, so it is like they are covered in down. She is smaller than our other two, so she will no doubt be at the bottom of the pecking order. Follow this link for more info on silkies.

Silkies are small (bantam) - Mulan is about half the size of our other two. She used to live in a rabbit hutch with a Silkie rooster, so she doesn't try to fly much. As a result, I think I'm going to have to redesign the chicken coop to place more roosts at an accessible height.

Wednesday, October 26, 2005

Hypertufa

Hypertufa is a simulated stone made from cement, peat moss (or sawdust), and water. They are permanent because of the cement in them and they are light weight because you substitute peat moss or sawdust for sand or rocks. Add vermiculite or perlite to make them even lighter.

Hypertufa bricks can be painted or carved. People make pots, planters, stepping stones, grots, castings, statues, columns, and many more decorative things out of hypertufa.

One favorite thing to do seems to be to take a styrofoam ice chest and coat the outside with hypertufa and use it as a planter. It looks very much like a heavy, carved, antique, limestone, horse trough from England. The stone those troughs were made from was called tufastone - hence the name.

Click here for recipes and ideas.
_________________

I found this on the internet long ago - don't know who to attribute it to.

Recipe for Adobe Bricks

Recipe for Six Adobe Bricks
Time required: about one month (most of it waiting for bricks to dry).Cost: little or nothingMaterials:

  • One five-gallon bucket

  • One mixing stick or old wooden spoon

  • 1/2 bucket of adobe clay

  • 1/4 bucket of sand

  • 1/8 bucket of straw cut into two-to-three-inch pieces

  • Enough water to make a doughlike consistency

  • Six empty half-gallon waxed milk containers OR six 4 * 11 * 22 inch wooden brick molds, which can be made from 2-by-4s nailed together

  • Waterproof tape
Directions:

  • Thoroughly mix the adobe clay, sand and straw in the bucket; add only enough water to create a workable consistency

  • You can use either the wooden brick molds or the waxed 1/2 gallon milk cartons. To make the molds from the latter, cut one side from the carton (which becomes the open top of the brick mold). Cut and flatten the folded spout end and tape the carton firmly into a rectangular shape.

  • Pack the brick mixture into the cartons, filling each about tow-thirds full. IN 15 minutes to 24 hours, the brick will be firm enough to tip out. Each batch is different' you will have to judge when your mix will maintain a brick shape.

  • Place shaped bricks in a sunny location and turn repeatedly as they dry. (A completely dry brick is uniform in color, inside and out.)

Tools for the DIYer

BASIC TOOLS for the home:
  • TAPE MEASURE: one that is 3/4-inch wide and 16 feet long is best for most around-the-house jobs.

  • STUD FINDER: locates studs behind finished walls, for anchoring purposes (such as hanging a mirror).

  • PLIERS: Get several types, including slip-joint pliers for gripping large items and pipes, lineman pliers for snipping wires as well as gripping, and needle-nose pliers for bending wires and gripping in tight spaces.

  • SCREWDRIVER: various sizes and heads or a single screwdriver with a variety of interchangeable heads.

  • C-CLAMP:  Two or three clamps of various sizes are recommended.

  • HANDSAW: There are two basic types - a crosscut saw, which cuts across the grain, and a ripsaw, which cuts with the grain. If you have to go with one, get the crosscut; 22-inch, 10- to 12-tooth size.

  • HAMMER: with a claw, a 16-inch handle and weighing about a pound.

  • LEVEL: a 9-inch tapered one; or two, a 6-inch and an 18-inch.

  • ADJUSTABLE WRENCH: A medium size will do for the vast majority of jobs.

  • UTILITY KNIFE: The blade should retract into the handle.
IN ADDITION to the tools listed, these tools and supplies also come in handy:
  • Allen wrenches of various sizes.

  • Bevel gauge for making accurate angle cuts in wood.

  • Wood Chisel for chipping out cuts in wood.

  • Circular saw.

  • Cordless drill.

  • Electrical extension cords.

  • Glues and tapes.

  • Plumb bob.

  • Plunger.

  • Pry bar.

  • Rubber mallet.

  • Sander (manual or electric).

  • Screws and nails of various sizes.

  • Staple gun.

  • Stilson wrench for turning pipes (aka pipe wrench).

  • Carpenters square.
MOVE UP from the basic level of do-it-yourselfing with:
  • Heavy-duty corded electric drill for work that is too big for a cordless drill.

  • Jigsaw.

  • Portable table saw.

  • Nut driver for tightening or loosening nuts and bolts (works like a screwdriver).

  • Reciprocating saw (i.e. Sawzall) for rough cutting.

  • Router.

  • Set of open-end wrenches.

  • Set of socket wrenches.

  • Spiral saw (i.e. RotoZip).

Tuesday, September 27, 2005

Chicken Saga VI

The days are starting to shorten, so the chickens are laying slower.  We are getting about 1 egg each day now.  I’ve read that putting a light in the coop for a few hours can keep the egg production up.  We may do this, if production continues to slow.