Friday, February 25, 2022

Hurt Chicken



Sometimes animals get hurt. I'm not sure how it happened, but I found this chicken's foot caught under a gate yesterday. She looked terrible! It's been so cold and she had been stuck there for hours!

The other chickens had been pecking at her head because she couldn't get away. Sometimes chickens aren't nice to each other. 

I got her out from under the gate. I put her in a warm spot in the barn with some food and water. She couldn't walk because her foot had been frozen to the ground under the gate.  I didn't think she would live. That was sad.

When I went out this morning, she was missing from her warm spot!

I searched around the barn and found her sitting on the cold cement floor. That didn't look comfortable, but she is alive!

https://youtu.be/0JRTaYMKprU

She's walking, but she limps. You can see which foot she doesn't want to use.

She likes to sit, and not move much.

This is where she hid. I put food and water near her so she doesn't have to go out with the other chickens unless she wants to.

I hope she gets better! She's a good hen. Not many of my chickens have names because I have so many. A few of the special chickens have names.

If you would like to tell me your ideas for a name for this hen, please write me a note or leave a message in the comments.

It seems like many of you have ideas for names for Sadie's calf.
The calf is due around March 28.
Save your ideas for names until I show you pictures of the calf in a little over 1 month.


I don't really have a favorite animal on the farm.
I like them all!


Sadie loves me the best out of everyone.
She comes for hugs every morning.
She loves it when I rub her neck under her chin.
She lays her head against me and snuggles me.
It's a bit tricky for a 900 lb cow to snuggle.
I don't mind. She's gentle, and she's very sweet.




Right now I only have one goat.
River is the only goat we have.
I milk her every morning.
She gives about 3/4 gallon every day.

Have a great week!

Friday, February 18, 2022

The Turkeys

 


This is our tom turkey.
A tom turkey is a boy turkey.
I love his feathers!


https://youtu.be/VEsgmxRnn9Y

Did you see the rooster walk through the video? We have one rooster and one tom turkey. We have two turkey hens. You saw those in another post. 

Baby turkeys aren't smart. 
Sometimes we have to take them away from their parents because they aren't smart enough to do what their mom tells them to do.
Sometimes they jump into buckets of water and drown. It's really sad!
I leave small water feeders in lots of places when we have baby turkeys, but they forget where they are. 

One year we had 16 baby turkeys born to our turkey hen.
Only 3 lived until they were grown up.
The tom turkey in the video is one of the babies that lived.

If you want to read more about turkeys that aren't smart, you can read this post.

I really hope that you are smart enough to follow what your mom and teachers tell you to do! They are trying to keep you safe and healthy!

I'm not sure what you mean by 'colder'
We live about 30 minutes away from your school.
It's usually close to the same temperature here as it is at your school.

The weather doesn't bother the animals. 
The sheep have warm, wool 'coats' on in the winter. 
They are very warm even though they have snow on their backs!

All of our farm animals have shelter. Some have stalls in the barn, some have sheds to get into out of the rain and snow, some have small shelters to snuggle inside when it's cold.



No, we don't have any pigs.
The city we live in doesn't let us have pigs.
Sad! We would love to try to raise a pig or two!
We've never done that before!



I bet you can figure out the age of each of the dogs if I give you their birthdates.

Mishka is on the left. Her birthday is April 14, 2019.
JJ is on the right. Her birthday is January 3, 2010
Scout isn't in the picture. He wanted to stay inside today.
His birthday is October 30, 2010


We have 2 cows, 1 milk goat, and 3 sheep. 
We have 3 turkeys, 6 ducks, and about 20 chickens.

We get 4-5 dozen eggs a week right now.
We'll get more as the weather warms up, and the sun is out longer.
Did you know that chickens need about 14 hours of daylight each day to lay eggs?

If you have dogs or cats, you might be noticing that they are beginning to shed their winter coats. You might have a lot of fluff and hair around your house. That's because the days are getting longer, and the dogs' bodies know that more daylight means that it's getting warmer.

Chickens are similar. They already got their new feathers in the fall. New feathers will keep them warm. But less daylight also tells their body to slow down on laying eggs. Now that we have more daylight, their bodies know it's a good time to start laying more eggs!

We are hoping that we get a chicken and a turkey to sit on some eggs and hatch them out. I'll be sure to let you know when that happens. It's so much fun to see the babies hatch!

Friday, January 28, 2022

Answering Questions

 Thanks so much for all your questions. It's getting easier to read your handwriting. You must be working hard on writing more clearly.

I think the same thing!
Boo Yah! for farms, and for good handwriting!

Yes, we cook the eggs that we gather on the farm.
Sometimes we eat them, and sometimes the dogs get to eat them.

I save the broken and frozen eggs for the dogs.


The dogs got eggs for breakfast today.

This is almost all the eggs I collected for the last two days.
Do you see the specked eggs in the middle of the bottom row?
Those are turkey eggs.

Good dogs! Mishka and JJ are learning how to wait until I call them to come into the barn.
They definitely deserve some yummy eggs for breakfast.

                                               

Grayci is almost 6 months old. She just started laying eggs.
We like turkey eggs, and chicken eggs, and duck eggs.
Thanks, Grayci!

We got those animals one at a time.

My friend sold me Echo. Echo has had a few calves. Sadie is the last calf she had. Now Sadie is going to have her own calf!

River was born April 9, 2016.
If you want to see more about River when she was born, you can look at this link.

There were so many more good questions! I'll answer more next week.

Have a great week!



Friday, January 21, 2022

Bedding and Friends

 Do you have sheets and blankets on a bed? I bet you do! 

Cows, sheep, and goats need something to sleep on, too. We call it bedding

We use wood chips and saw dust for animal bedding. I get BIG loads of wood chips from a place called Chip Drop online.

We just got a new pile. I've gone through 7 piles since you started school.
That's a lot of piles to move!

Sometimes we move them with the tractor.

We put lots and lots of chips around our two new apple trees this fall.

I use a wheelbarrow to move wood chips into the stalls.
I put sawdust on top of the wood chips to help the stall stay cleaner, and nicer for the cows and goats and sheep to sleep on.

Once the wood chips and sawdust are full of manure (cow poo)
I use a wheelbarrow to dig it out and put it in a pile.

We don't send the pile to the dump, even though it looks like a big, yucky mess. Lots of families come in the spring and load it into buckets, bags, trucks, and sometimes trailers.

What do you think they want all that manure for?

It's great for gardens and flower beds! Once it sits for a few months it turns into wonderful mulch for gardens. Last year we had 8 families that came to get all the manure. I have bigger piles behind the barn, too!

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Do you have a drinking fountain at school?
We have a downspout that leads right into a barrel.
The roof collects a lot of rain. It goes into the gutters, 
then down through the downspout.
Roof water is the cows favorite water!

https://youtu.be/CfW4RgIbDvQ

Sadie loves to get drinks from our 'farm water fountain' when the water is coming off the roof.

Here are a few photos of my animal friends. They are friends, too!

Which animals are sheep, and which animal is a goat?


Echo (the cow) loves River (the goat).
She licks her through the fence.

Thanks for all your questions! I'll be answering some of them next week. 

Have a great week!

Friday, January 14, 2022

The Chickens Help Clean the Fridge

 I cleaned the refrigerator last night. There were a lot of leftovers that no one in our family was going to eat.

I got a whole bucket full of leftovers!

One thing that's nice about living on a farm is that the animals will eat our leftovers.

The chickens and turkeys really liked the refrigerator leftovers for breakfast this morning. They liked it better than their regular chicken food.

Do you see that pile of leftovers?
Some of the pile is spaghetti noodles that we didn't want to reheat.
Chickens love spaghetti noodles!
I think it reminds them of worms.... yuck.


Do you see the two turkeys? One is dark and one is gray.
The dark one is Brownie, the gray one is Graycie.
They are both girls, and lay lots of eggs in the spring and summer.

Did you know you can eat turkey eggs? They taste just like chicken eggs, but they are bigger and have brown spots on them. I'll post some pictures of turkey eggs in the spring when they start laying again.

The chickens didn't really come into the house and help clean the fridge last night. They just ate all the leftovers breakfast. That's a help because we aren't throwing food in the trash.

Do you know who else eat leftovers?

River, our milk goat, helps with leftovers, too!
She loves eating banana peels.


All the animals like stale bread, old waffles, and leftover fruits and vegetables. We almost never throw away food. 

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We also have a barn cat. She's old, we can't remember when we got her. She's been here at least 12 years.

This is her favorite spot in the winter.

She has a little 'nest' on the blanket that covers the hose in the winter. We have the hose coiled up on a heated dog bed to keep it from freezing in the winter.

I cover the whole pile with an old car windshield cover that helps to keep the heat in.

Midnight sleeps inside the little hut where it's warm and cozy at night.

She loves living in the barn. Sometimes she comes to the back door of the house, but she never comes in. She likes her barn much better than the house.

Have a great week!

Thursday, January 6, 2022

Happy New Year!

I hope you had a wonderful Christmas break, and a Happy New Year!

Your teacher told me that you would like to meet some of the animals on our little farm. Some of you met the animals when you came last fall to make apple cider. 

Do you remember any of these animals?

This is me and Sadie, our 2 year old cow!

Sadie loves getting cow hugs every morning. She loves to put her head on me so I'll rub her face and under her chin.

Sadie is a very pretty cow. 
She's also very gentle, which is why we love her.
Sadie will have her first calf (baby cow) in March. 
We're so excited!

                                                     

We also have a cow named Echo. Echo is Sadie's mom.

Echo is walking to the gate to meet me this morning.
Echo will have a calf in August.

Echo is Sadie's mom. Echo will be 8 years old in February. I milk her every morning. When Sadie has her calf, I'll milk Sadie, too!

I love looking at the mountains in the morning as I head out to the barn. They are beautiful! I love watching the seasons change on the mountains, too. In the winter they are covered with snow, in the spring I watch the snow melt and the trees turn green, and in the fall I look for the colorful trees on the side of the mountains.

We also have 3 sheep and a goat. And a lot of chickens, ducks, and turkeys. 



This is Pobrecito. That means "Poor Little One" in Spanish.
We gave him that name because he almost died a few times when he was a baby this spring.
He's doing much better right now, and his is a very gentle lamb.


This is Cocoa. He's the biggest ram (boy sheep) that we have.
He's also a very nice animal.
Sometimes new people frighten him, so he'll run away.

Cocoa has big horns, I don't know why he would be afraid of new people!

Sometimes Sadie is afraid of new people and runs away, too. I don't know why a big cow would be afraid of people who are so much smaller than she is.

I'll show you some of the chickens, ducks, and turkeys next week. And I'll take some photos of River, our milk goat.


Friday, June 5, 2020

Burger's Horns and New Turkey Chick




The flower beds in the front yard look beautiful at this time of year. The vegetable garden is growing well, too.

The puffy pink flowers were given to me by my mother-in-law. She took them from her mother's flower bed, who got them from her mother, who brought them from another country to America when they immigrated.

I love remembering people who came to America from so far away. It helps me to feel a part of their lives even though I never met some of them.

I have things passed down from my parents and grandparents inside my home, too. They all come with stories. Some are long stories, some are very short stories because I wasn't given much history.

Our little farm is also a bit of history. My mother-in-law and father-in-law both grew up on farms in Idaho. They were the first generation off the farm. They moved further and further east as their family grew and as my father-in-laws jobs changed.

I think it's interesting that we ended up back in the west where they started, and that we live on a small hobby farm doing some of the same things that they grew up doing.

The corn is growing. It was in the ground for only 4 days
before it sprouted. The corn seed came from my friend who
saves seed corn every year.

These 2 beds have cabbages (the bigger green plants in the middle of the beds)
and carrots (the long green row of plants towards the front of the bottom bed)
and some celery (small plants on the left side of the top bed)
I think its a little bit funny that we call wooden boxes 'beds.' It's almost like the plants are supposed to be sleeping instead of growing.

We are hoping to put in a greenhouse this year so we moved the garden to a different spot, and built the raised beds.

*     *     *     *     *     *
It was time to take care of Burger King's
horns, and neuter him.
I was able to get him down and tie him up before others came to help hold him. It's not a fun job, but it keeps the animals safer and humans safer if they don't have horns. I was proud of myself! This is the first time I was able to get a calf down and tied all by myself!

Does it look a little sad? It's not really. He stays still while we are working on him which means he is safer and so are we.



He's running around and playing in the pasture now. He acts as if nothing happened. If fact, he is more friendly now than he was last week!

We took care of Sadie's horns during the winter. It has to be done when the cows are still fairly young. 

*     *     *     *     *     *
The hen who was sitting on turkey eggs hatched out two chicks. She was so careful about taking good care of the eggs!



There was something wrong with this chick so the hen wouldn't take care of it.

We kept it warm and our neighbor took it to her house
to try to see if it would live.
It didn't live. It couldn't walk, and it had some trouble seeing. Hens usually know if a chick will survive or if it won't. Sometimes people can work with an animal and help it live, and sometimes there is nothing we can do.

The second chick that hatched was healthy and the hen
was willing to take care of it.
Turkeys are not very smart. They don't know how to follow their mama and stay safe. We took the turkey chick away and it's being raised with some other turkey chicks that we bought. It will be very safe in a brooder. It can't get lost, and it has food and water and heat all in one area.

The duck is still sitting on her nest under the
rabbit cage. It's safe under there.
I think we'll have new ducklings in 2 weeks! 

*     *     *     *     *     *

Millie, the new goat kid, doesn't have any other goat kids to play with. She likes to play with Sadie, and Sadie is patient enough that she lets Millie jump all over her!


Sadie is such a sweet, gentle cow! I love her!

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We're still burning the foxtail in the barn yard. There isn't as much this year as there was last year. Foxtail is awful! It gets in the dogs fur, it gets in the barnyard animals fur, and none of the animals will eat it.

The best way to get rid of it is to burn it.

We've had a lot of thistle this year, too. The animals won't eat thistle, either so we're working on digging it out, and spraying it with a special weed killer that won't hurt the animals.

Thistles grow big, and they have spines!
They are too poky to eat!

None of the animals will eat the grass if it's close to
the thistle. No one wants to be poked in the nose when
they are trying to have lunch!

I hope you've enjoyed your first week of summer vacation!