I hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving with your family. We had all our family together for Thanksgiving and we had a wonderful time.
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Do you remember the types of dishes and bowls and cups you used during Thanksgiving dinner? Some dishes were probably flat, some were more like bowls. Each bowl or dish is used on purpose to hold each type of food.
The animals on the farm have certain types of feeders, too. We use the word "feeder" for something that holds animal food.
This is the feeder on the milk stand. It's called a 'hang over bucket' because it hangs on a bar or a piece of wood. |
This is what it looks like with feed in it. |
We don't wash the feeders very often. People need clean dishes, bowls, and cups to eat out of. Animals don't need to have their feeders cleaned that often.
This is Echo's 'hang over bucket'. It's much bigger than the goats' bucket because Echo's head is much bigger! This is the same size bucket that horses eat out of, too. |
You drink from a cup or a bottle, but that doesn't work well for most animals.
The hose also plugs in! It's hard to get water into the barrels if the hose is frozen. Someone was really smart and figured out a way to put a heating wire inside a hose so that farmers can use a hose in the winter instead of having to fill buckets of water, then dumping them into the barrel where the animals drink.
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Every morning Scout, JJ, and Midnight like to have a treat in the barn.
JJ gets her sip of milk from an old plastic feeder on the floor. |
Scout gets his sip of milk in an old metal pan near the milk stand. |
Midnight gets her sip of milk in an old metal lid. |
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One morning when I went out to do the chores the hen was gone from the nest, and the eggs were almost frozen. The eggs were so cold that there is no way the chicks inside the eggs could have survived. The eggs need to be kept at about 100 degrees so the chicks inside can grow. Once they are hatched the mama hen needs to keep them at about 95 degrees until they can grow enough feathers to keep themselves warm.
This is not the time of year that we get warm temperatures like that!
Things on the farm don't always turn out the way we want them to. Sometimes that's for the best.
Earlier this year we had some chicks hatch out. That was the first time we ever got to see some chicks hatch!
I thought you might like to see some videos of that, too.
Here's Xander holding the little chick from the video. |
Those chicks are all grown up now. They were some of the roosters that we gave away to another farm. Our farm only needs one rooster. Roosters are noisy. The more roosters we have the noisier they are because each one tries to be louder than the other!
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Do you remember Dale? She's the chicken that likes to ride the goats as if she's a cowgirl.
We don't know what happened but two weeks ago Dale hurt her leg. Usually a chicken will die if they hurt their leg. There aren't any chicken veterinarians to take care of them.
Sometimes they get better!
Can you see Dale limping a little bit? She's getting better! She couldn't walk on her left leg two weeks ago. All she could do was hop around the farm on her right leg.
I hope she gets all the way better!
Stay warm and have a great week!
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