Raising Wood Tuesday

It’s a Tuesday morning and the sun is rising. Take a look outside and there’s a herd of cattle chomping on short fall grass. They moo’d at you last night because they aren’t ready for hay yet, and the human must know.

Ah! The day has started with a birth. Momma Layla is 8 days past due, and is past due no longer. Little calf on the ground. She’s a great momma and needed no help, and is slightly removed from the trampling feet of other cows.

Alright little guy, lets give you a check over. Breathing, strong neck, has eyes and ears and lips and tail and feet. Still soaking wet and covered in the softest fur on the farm. The tail is oddly curly, but nothing much to do about it. Oh, it’s a boy!

Go forth young bull, find that milk. Our work here is finished.

Go back inside, get to work on career job stuff. Finish work, bundle kids to Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu class, come home, dinner, read bible and pray, off to bed. Jenny goes to check on the meat birds. We just moved them outside the day before and they should be downright giddy on their grass still.

“Robert we massacred the chickens!”

“I’m sure it’s not that bad.”

“No! There’s at least ten dead!”

Sure enough, 10 of the 45 birds over heated in the day. We made some shade adjustments and monitored the next day. A handy roll of radiant barrier was in the shop. One of the cats kindly ripped holes in it for her claws. Now it has a new use for protecting sensitive chicks from the sun. We haven’t lost one since, but it was a day wrecker.

Well, since we’re out here anyways, let’s see how the new heifers are doing.

We drove 2 hours each way on Saturday to pick these up near Temple Texas. Stopped at the world famous, Texas sized gas station, Buc-ees in Hillsboro. If you go around the back there’s a bulk chemical tank for their BBQ sauce.

A young man and his wife have their first child due this week, reasonable possibility it was on this Tuesday. He picks up calves on the fringes of the auctions nearby and bundles them together for buyers like us, also on the fringes of the system. He gets to pay bills, we get to build the herd for next season. These three heifers have mingled in nicely with the herd. All in all, not a bad Tuesday.

Tin Foil Chicks and the Kitten

The chicks pecked their way out of the shells and moved cheerfully into a chick pen.

Tropical Resort

Jenny set up a brooder heater. Last year we used a traditional heat lamp and has success with it. This year we are using a flat panel heater to lower the risk of fire and burns on little fingers. It is working well, with one problem.

The problem is the chicks want to roost. They specifically want to roost on top of the heater, freely depositing chicken manure across the surface of it. Our Good&Cheap(TM) solution is a foil pan fitted to the top. It blocks the surface access without causing any new problems.

One surprise was how many different times and places the chicks managed to pry under the foil pan. We would hear distress cheeping and discover one roosting in the foil pan oven on top of the heater. The fourth iteration of the foil pan finally blocked all of these intrepid adventures.

There was another surprise this weekend. A new kitten joined the workshop. We’re calling her Blue Belle, and more on her in the next post.

Tin Foil Chicks and the Kitten

The chicks pecked their way out of the shells and moved cheerfully into a chick pen.

Tropical Resort

Jenny set up a brooder heater. Last year we used a traditional heat lamp and has success with it. This year we are using a flat panel heater to lower the risk of fire and burns on little fingers. It is working well, with one problem.

The problem is the chicks want to roost. They specifically want to roost on top of the heater, freely depositing chicken manure across the surface of it. Our Good&Cheap(TM) solution is a foil pan fitted to the top. It blocks the surface access without causing any new problems.

One surprise was how many different times and places the chicks managed to pry under the foil pan. We would hear distress cheeping and discover one roosting in the foil pan oven on top of the heater. The fourth iteration of the foil pan finally blocked all of these intrepid adventures.

There was another surprise this weekend. A new kitten joined the workshop. We’re calling her Blue Belle, and more on her in the next post.

Planning a Hatch

This spring we are planning on hatching chicken eggs. Jenny is actually, I’m mostly observing this project.

In planning a Hatch, there are steps. First, a daddy rooster and a momma hen… What’s that? Ok, you get it.

Because we’re American, modern, and do not have a broody hen, the fertilized eggs go in an incubator for three weeks. It’s like a spa for 22 chicken eggs that doesn’t at all remind me of humans hatching in Huxley’s Brave New World.

Not just for eating

Now there are details to manage and this engineer farm lady is all over it. Adjust this dial to manage humidity, that one to manage temp, this one there to manage turning. Did I mention the turning and the lights? Because this little R2D2 unit is making sure it’s still busy at night on my dresser when sleep is what’s happening.

Seriously, so many lights

Sunday is our big day, although maybe we see some pips coming in Saturday. Who knows?? Or maybe nothing and our rooster is no good with his hen harem!

We are planning for life though and have the brooder pen ready with pine shavings, heat bed, water and feed. Give’m a month and they’ll be ready for outdoor time; just in time for the phase two hatching to commence.

Nice resort waiting to hit capacity with chicks

Birds yet to Feather

You know those weeknights where you know get some goods at the farm store, you have your kids with you and the chicks are half price after Easter?

Heat Lamp Row

Of course we come home with a dozen chicks. They are full of down and fluff and rapidly transitioning to feathers. I’m excited to get them in the pasture behind the cattle to harvest the fly proteins!

What’s the biggest threat to the birds right now? A curious and energetic toddler that wants to pick them up. So they get a lid and a heat lamp in the laundry room.