Saturday, February 27, 2010

Egg count

Total for the week is 33.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Chicks-a-growin

The chicks are 4 weeks old and boy have they grown!  One more week and we'll be able to take down their cardboard wall, so they can roam free in the coop.  They're not big enough to go outside yet though.

This little gal is a Barred Rock.  Very pretty when they grow up - almost zebra striped.


Another Barred Rock, but we think this one is a cockerel (rooster)...

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Six rototillers!

If you've ever wanted loose, airy soil to plant your flowers in, you don't need to get a rototiller.  You just need to get chickens.  There is one small drawback.  After you've planted your flowers, your chickens will continue to rototill and very shortly you will have no flowers left!


Last spring/summer, I had some beautiful begonia's and peony's in this bed.  By late summer, the rototillers discovered they liked eating my flowers.  About 1 day later, they were all gone.  I wasn't too heart broken - at least I had enjoyed them all summer long.  And, I still had 6 Purple Coral Bells in this bed.  Since they're perennials, I would have even bigger plants come next spring. 

Take a closer look at the picture.  Do you see any Purple Coral Bells?  No. Thanks to the rototillers scratching and pecking away at them all winter long.  I have multiple plant beds around the house and they have all had the same fate.  Well, one exception.  I do have a hanging planter that the chickens haven't figure out how to fly up into yet.  Just give them time though!

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Say Cheese!

1 gallon of whole milk.  Check.
1/2 cup lemon juice.  Check.
Muslin.  Check.

What will this make you ask?  CHEESE!  Yup, today was our first cheese making experience.  What else do you need in order to make cheese?  You guessed it, a book!  For Christmas I gave Dan 'Home Cheese Making' so we looked through the basic cheese recipes and decided on Panir.  The book says Panir is an Indian cheese, one of the simplest types of unripened cheese, is mild and readily absorbs the flavors of the herbs and spices.  Sounds good to me!

Step 1 - bring milk to a boil
Step 2 - drizzle in lemon juice
Step 3 - remove from heat and stir until curds form and let set for 10 min
Step 4 - laddle curds into a colander lined with muslin.
Step 5 - let drain for 2-3 hours
Step 5 - eat or store cheese.

It wasn't exactly what I was envisioning.  I was thinking of a nice soft cheese to be eaten with crackers.  It's more of a feta consistency though and has very little taste.  I'm not exactly sure what I thought it would taste like considering the only ingredients are milk and lemon juice.  Dan has been eating it on his salads and enjoys it a great deal.  I don't really care for it.  The good thing about making foods at home is that you can try, try again!






Take two!

Unfortunately, between nightly chores, errands and dinner, we never got around to mating Jasper and Bunny #1 again. 

So on Sunday morning, we figured better late than never.  We put Bunny #1 in with Jasper again and this time she seemed to know what she was doing.  She propped her tail up so he could do his business.  He mounted several times, but didn't fall over sideways today.  Hopefully he did his business.  Assuming he did and assuming she's fertile (does are fertile 365 days per year) we should have some baby bunnies in 31 days. 

From what our book tells us, we should be able to feel around her belly in 10 days to see if we feel hard marble-like balls.  If so, she's pregnant!  Twenty-one days later she should have a litter of 8-10 kits.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Egg count

28 eggs this week.

Mating season

We're hoping a month from now the weather will be pretty nice.  At least not freezing.  And as long as it's not freezing, that means baby bunnies can survive.  That of course, means we need to mate our does and buck to make little babies.

As with most of our homesteading adventures, we turn to a book.  Storey's Guide to Raising Rabbits contains everything one needs to know about rabbits, including how to breed them.  Turns out, it's quite simple!

Saturday morning, Dan took doe Bunny #1 and put her in with our Buck (Jasper).  Jasper immediately knew what to do.  He started chasing her round and round.  Dan watched their dance for a bit and came back inside.  It wasn't until later that he told me he put them together.  Holy cow!  He mated the rabbits without telling me!?!  Sheesh.  I stormed around the house getting my coat, scarf, hat, gloves, etc and went out to see what's going on.  Jasper started chasing again, mounted for a few seconds and then fell over.  I guess with this being his first time, he wasn't sure what to do. I went back inside and read the book again.  Sure enough it says "don't blink or you'll miss it" and "when the buck is 'done' he will fall over on his side".  Holy cow again!  They did mate while I was out there, I just didn't realize it.  I read this to Dan and he said 'he did that while I was out there too!'.  Apparently Jasper DOES know what he's doing.  Now I call him Stud Muffin.

We kept reading the book and it says that 8-10 hours after the first mating session that we should put them back together to mate again to increase her chances of fertility.  So, we'll put them together around 6pm tonight.

Here is Jasper (aka Stud Muffin)...
And here are our does.  Bunny #1 is the one on the far right...

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Snuggling pigs

Thought this was way too cute to not snap a pic and post. Bacon and Sausage aren't very fond of cold days. They tend to stay in their hut and snuggle up.

Egg count

36 eggs this week.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Moving day!

The air under the brooder is heated up and it's time to move the chicks in. Dan transported them via a plastic tub into their new home. We have a cardboard box around their brooder to keep them confined until they get a little bit bigger. Hope they like it!




New home

Here is a pic of the chicks new brooder right after Dan finished constructing it (it's upside down in the pic). One socket has a regular heat lamp in it and the other has an infared bulb. We placed it in the coop and are waiting for the temp to heat up. The chicks will be moving soon!


Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Movin' on up

The chicks are growing like crazy! They've just about outgrown their first home (aka... a large cardboard box in our basement).

This weekend, we need to move them out to the coop, but we need to do some work first. Dan's going to building a brooder box that will hover about 8 inches off the ground with 2 light bulbs under it. If the chicks are cold, they can go under it, if they're hot they can step out for some fresh air.

We're looking forward to moving them to their permanent home. Will post pics of their new home.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Egg count

35 eggs for the week.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Down to 31...

This morning when Dan went to check on the chicks he found Chicken Little dead. Sigh. Hopefully at least he didn't suffer any longer than necessary. It's so sad... he was such a cute little fella... we were hoping he'd pull through.

On a good note... the 31 remaining chicks appear to be in great health. We've learned that in the chick world, apparently only the strong do survive.

Monday, February 1, 2010

Chicken Little

We've moved our chicks to a larger box and have had to replace their 'baby' feeder with a much larger feeder. The chicks are growing at lightning speeds. However, one chick isn't growing. He's almost the same size as when he arrived almost two weeks ago. We've affectionately named him Chicken Little. We thought perhaps the other chicks aren't letting him eat, so Dan put a smaller box inside their big box and put Chicken Little in it with his own food and water. He seems to breath very heavy and is almost dazed. He's also had a pretty bad bout of pasty butt. I check on him a few times a day and clean his behind and dip his beak in his water and food so he knows it's there. I've also been giving him yogurt in case he hasn't developed enough good bacteria in his system. Hope he'll pull through so we don't have to cull him. :(