It’s That Time of Year

It’s that time of year again. We are going through what will probably be our last cold spell of the winter. The daffodils are blooming and the bees have stopped taking sugar water. That also means it’s time for baby chicks and seed starting.

chicks 2-25-14 chicks 2-26-14

I stopped by Tractor Supply and they had their first batch of chicks in. I was hoping to add some Giant Blacks and Plymouth Barred Rocks because the few I have left are getting older. They only had 3 Black Giants left and no Barred Rocks. I grabbed the Giants and added 3 Production Reds and 6 Black Alstrops. We have never had Alstrops in the past but I read that they are a good free range breed. All of our chickens and turkeys are free range so we lose a few birds every year to predators. The dogs can’t be everywhere and the hens like to nest away from everything. For this reason I always buy a few chicks, run some of our eggs through the incubator as well as let a few hens set. This allows us to stay ahead of the predators and by allowing the hens to set I believe we are raising a more savvy chicken. If they make it through one or two springs they know how to avoid being dinner for a fox or coyote. It seems like every year we are adding a different breed of chicken to the mix and I do mean mix. We have some strange looking roosters running around here. Most will end up in the freezer or packed in canning jars but we will let a few hang around. We are not interested in a specific breed of chicken. We like the variety of shape and color.

seed start

This week I started a few seeds under the lights. I have some broccoli, cauliflower, cyan and bell pepper, and three varieties of tomato. The tomatoes I chose this year are Black Krim, Mortgage Lifter Yellow, and Aunt Ginny’s Purple. This is the first year for the Purple so we’ll have to see if we like them. I should say if I like them because Lisa doesn’t eat them unless they are in a sauce. As for me, it doesn’t get much better than a summer time fresh off the vine tomato. I left room in the tray so I can start some more seeds about a week before these plants are ready to transplant. If you look close you can see one broccoli and one tomato plant. The broccoli sprout is in the back on the left and the tomato is in the front on the right. The tomato leaves haven’t seterated from the seed case yet.

 

Next I have to start my sweet potato slips. If you haven’t started your own slips it is a very simple process. I use toothpicks and canning jars. I stick three or four toothpicks around the middle of the sweet potato to hold it in the top of the jar. Fill the jar with enough water to keep the bottom half of the potato submerged. You will start to see roots first but after a while several sprouts will spring up from the top of the potato. Once these get to be about four or five inches long you can cut them out of the potato. Make sure you get a little piece of the potato with the slip. Place these in a shallow dish of water for a few days and they will start to sprout roots. After the slips have their own roots you can plant them in the garden providing the ground is warm enough. I have found the slips are pretty hardy and will continue to grow in the dish if the weather doesn’t cooperate and you need to hold off planting. This is my third year of growing sweet potatoes and I started with two potatoes from the grocery store.

Solomon

Here is our latest rescue. Our Vet needed to find a home for this little guy and we were the first suckers I mean people he thought of. Lisa has named him Solomon. Originally we were going to have him fixed but Lisa wants to breed him to Loretta, our AGH/KuneKune cross, to sell the piglets as pets. Allot of the people that were interested in out piglets wanted small pets. We have no idea how big this guy will get but I hope he stays relatively small.

Solomon-2 Solomon

We have him in a playpen with a litter box for now. He used the liter box within the first few minutes.  We still don’t know how we will handle his housing , inside or outside, yet. Well have to play it by ear.

 

Rosco – update

We took Rosco to the vet again and had him x-rayed to make sure there weren’t any metal or other foreign objects.  The vet still believes he is suffering from “limber neck” botulism that just won’t go away. This has been a long rollercoaster with no end in sight. Two or three days where he can’t stand up and then a week or so where he is fine. Over and over again. He has been consulting with other vets but so far there haven’t been any other ideas.

Bee Yard Repaired

The salvageable empty hive only had two broken legs and it didn’t take long to get it ready for the bees. After evaluating all the damage, I will be able to repair the damaged hive that had the bees in it by shortening it by about six inches or I might just completely rebuild it. I was able to salvage two pair of legs so I won’t have to rebuild them.

broke leg hive

When I was moving the bees I noticed that some of them had yellow pollen on their legs. That is a very good sign. Something is blooming and spring is just around the corner. I also noticed that there were several bars of mixed brood and caped honey so they are doing better than I thought they were. I wish I would have had the camera when I opened the hive but I didn’t. I was trying to move quickly to get them moved.

Until I have time to repair it, the damaged spare hive will be a sugar water stand. You can see the three active hives in the background.

bee yard restored

 

Rosco Update-

We are still fighting to get Rosco cured of whatever this mystery ailment is. He has been doing very well for the past week. He has been on a roller coaster with its ups and downs. He would have about seven good days and we would think we had it whipped but then he would crash for two or three days. This weekend he had a minor setback but he nothing like he was having. In the past when he went down he couldn’t stand and would lose some control of his neck. This weekend he would stumble some but never went completely down. We did bring him in for the night but he will probably go back out in the morning. From the length and severity of this set back it looks like we may be winning this battle. I only wish someone could tell us what the problem is. He has been treated with three different antibiotics. Each had about the same results. He appeared to respond to each but he still relapsed. Finally I decided to treat him for coccidia. It is a parasite that turkeys can get from living confined with chickens. Geese usually don’t have a problem with it but they can get it. Our birds all range together with a couple of acres to roam so they aren’t crowded. This may not be the issue but nothing else has worked so we will be doctoring his water just in case.

Bees -vs- Tree

Some days it just doesn’t pay to get out of bed.

I have needed to cut a couple of trees to let more sunlight into our small orchard. One oak that had already lost the top and a medium cedar near the bee hives.

The plan was to cut the oak and then drop the cedar on the oak stump. The trees had other plans. The oak went backwards pinching the saw. I tied a rope to the saw and had Lisa, stand well out of any danger, pull the rope. I had to resort to the ax to chip away at the stump until the tree let loose and Lisa could pull the saw free. The oak fell against the cedar. Grrrr  After fixing the saw and retrieving the truck and a chain we were able to get the oak down and out of the way. I should have taken all this as a sign and quit while I was ahead.

The cedar was next. For a little insurance I climbed the tree and tied a rope about two thirds of the way up the tree. I tied the other end off on another tree. Turns out it was a good thing. I proceeded make my cuts to fell the tree. Everything was looking good until something I have never seen happened. The tree tried to fall 90 degrees to the cut. I have never seen this happen before unless the tree was unbalanced or had vines pulling on it. I don’t know if there was a gust of wind or what but guess what was in the path of the tree now. Bee hives! Three active and two empty hives were now in the path of a falling tree with nothing to stop it. Fortunately the rope put just enough pressure on it to guide it away from the full hives. Well, almost.

Tree - bees

The tree scored a near direct hit on the first hive I ever built. Fortunately it was empty. I had turned another empty hive on its side to allow chickens and other animals access to it when it got wax worms. Two hives were not touched and at first I thought the third was fine.

empty hive under tree

When I started cutting away the limbs the third hive fell over. The tree had broken the legs but had been holding it up. Fortunately it was cool and getting dark so the bees didn’t swarm out. Only a few came after me while I was trying to clean up the mess. I eventually had to get my smoker and bee suit to work on the damaged hive. Then they had had enough and really started to try and drive me away. I was able to remove the broken legs off one end and place the damaged hive on top of another one.

hive with broke leggs tree bee aftermath

Sunday was going to be a rooster killing day but now it will be a hive repair and bee move day. At least I was able to salvage the legs off the hive that suffered the direct hit. I will be able to put them on the other empty hive and then move all the bees into it. Moving the bees into this other hive was already on my to do list but it just wasn’t at the top of the list. Now it is.