I do the crock pot as well but with chicken. It's good in tacos, over rice . . . Speaking of rice, I've cooked rice in Enchilada sauce and that was good! Add a little water. I like a little enchilada sauce in an omelet too. Use it too make a dressing for taco salad.
We had this earlier in the year when we butchered our roosters. I don't recall what recipe I used, but I've made enough roasted chicken in my life, I mostly winged it. I waited to cook the bird until the body had relaxed from rigor mortis. I didn't do that last year and the meat was very...
17.5 sq. ft. of space per bird in the coop and in the run (Coop and run are integrated structure). 363 sq. ft. per bird of free ranging area.
I think this is just right. Less than that and I would be spending too much of my time trying to manage manure impact.
I wouldn't tolerate a rooster that wasn't a gentleman to the hens. Getting rid of my first rooster broke my heart too (he was so pretty), but I'm sure he won't be the last.
I don't think it's an EITHER/OR proposition. The way I understand it, covenants are the legal leg the HOAs stand on. HOAs enforce the covenants. The OP said in his post there IS an HOA that has never met.
Covenants can be modified and nullified. Talk to your neighbors and consider pooling...
Get a copy of the bylaws for your HOA and find out what it would take to change that! The bylaws may even contain provisions for dissolving the HOA. Don't let this guy use it to bully the neighborhood.
I'm sure they'll be exposed to it and most chicks can fight it. In my experience Erica is spot on. I think you're on the right track.
I don't take chicks outside till they have enough feathers to keep their core warm. When I take them outside I make sure the day is warm, the sun is bright...
That's a nice price. For us, straw comes in a bale that is twice as large as the bales Timothy comes in. I can nearly 4 times as much straw for what a bale of Timothy hay costs locally (which fluctuates significantly throughout the year).
As an added bonus sometimes there are still wheat...
I like straw over shavings, because it breaks down faster. But I hear shavings attract fewer flies. I let the chickens turn it over. I apply it thicker under the roosts because they poop most there. During the winter I don't remove any litter, I just keep adding more when it looks a little...
Same story here.
They're attracted to the color and peck at it instinctively. When I first hung mine, I tapped the nipples and they stood there watching the watering dripping out. One tried it, then they all tried it. NO PROBLEM! Best thing ever.
They all seem to prefer the highest roost possible at night. So they have a long roost right below the roof, above my head (about 7 ft off the ground). There are 3 other small roosts about two feet apart that step up to that highest roost. It looks like a jungle gym. I used 2-3 inch thick...
Yeah, that looks like an unbiased and informative website. LOL Blogs are a good place to talk about news, but not a good place to GET news that helps you make rationale decisions. Headlines+Hysteria+Clickcounts=$$$$$
If you are REALLY worried about how the APHIS regulations will affect...
I don't set a price, I just ask people to pay me what they think they can afford. Some people pay me $5/doz., some people a couple bucks, for others it's just whatever they happen to have on them. In the end it pays for the feed and we eat eggs for free. Mostly.
We have a similar problem. The over-hang is not sufficient to keep my garden boots dry in the winter with all the heavy rain we get. I put flip-flops out there. It doesn't matter to me if they get wet and it's rarely cold enough here that wet shoes bother me. When it is cold enough to...
I have a large coop build from PVC and wood. At some point the PVC will become brittle and we'll have to rebuild the whole thing. Wood is much more durable and it's also more expensive. I'm hoping by the time this coop wears out I'll have the money to build a nicer coop (the way things are...
I read a book that mentioned how the currents in the ancient ocean allowed warm water to circulate from pole to pole and moderated the climate in the far north and south. When Antarctica broke away from South America drifted to it's current position it became isolated from those moderating...