Showing posts with label chickens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chickens. Show all posts

August 16, 2011

The Eat Local Challenge...

I got extremely busy at the end of last week and did not add a follow up post during the Eat Local Challenge Week, as I had intended to. It was a fun challenge and I stopped at more local farmstands than I might have otherwise.


Although I continue to use items outside of the 100 mile range, I am really inspired to incorporate even more local foods than I had been previously.


We just got a couple of days of much needed rain and the garden looks great.


Thank you to "the girls" for insect control, compost, and eggs.


I made potato salad from our garden potatoes this week.



Garden cucumbers with (local) sour cream and fresh dill.



Homemade salsa...


Awesome guacamole...


...and I just picked up some wild blackberry jelly from a local farm stand. I can't wait to try it on the homemade bread that my friend Erica made this morning!

June 15, 2011

Lucy's first egg!

Just a quick post before I run out the door.....Lucy laid her first egg today! It is tiny...but I am so proud of her!
Good job Lucy!

May 21, 2011

Today in the Garden...

It doesn't know whether to rain or shine today.
I started off by heading to Meadowstone Farm to see if they had some fresh greens...



It will be a little while before I eat my own spinach, kale, and lettuce...


I decided to introduce Lucy to the chicks...


At first they were wary of each other...


Then Ruby found a worm and Lucy tried to steal it away...


I hadn't even noticed that the bleeding hearts were in bloom...


I started weeding the flower beds and then I surprised our garden snake...and it surprised me! No picture...it slithered away so quickly, but it sure got much bigger this year!



The air is perfumed by the scent of lilacs...


...soon they will be in full bloom.

The Lily of the Valley are just opening up...another one of my favorite scents...


A carpet of violets is growing along the edge of the driveway, spilling out of the flower beds...


...and the hosta is unfurling..


...and that's how my garden grows.

May 14, 2011

Here a chick...there a chick...everywhere a chick, chick...

I went down to the Chicken Swap in Merrimack today.
I came home with three new "girls".






My neices offered some names...such as "butterball", "tooie", and "squaks"...


On the ride home, I talked with the chicks and decided on the names... 

They seemed to like..."Ruby"
"Charlotte"  and
"Pecky Sue"...
                                      



April 19, 2011

NH Chicken Swaps - May 2011

There are more Chicken swaps happening in May...

MILFORD TRACTOR SUPPLY
191 ELM ST
MILFORD NH
MAY 7
9AM TO 1 PM

TILTON HILLSIDE MEADOW AGWAY
360 EAST MAIN ST
TILTON NH
MAY 8
10 AM TO 2 PM

MERRIMACK TRACTOR SUPPLY
515 DANIEL WEBSTER HWY
MERRIMACK NH
MAY 14
9 AM TO 1 PM

GRIFFINBROOK LTD
174 RAYMOND RD
CANDIA NH
MAY 15
10 TO 2PM


TILTON TRACTOR SUPPLY
630 WEST MAIN ST
TILTON NH
MAY 21
9AMTO1PM

CHICHESTER TRACTOR SUPPLY
307 DOVER RD  RT4
CHICHESTER NH
MAY 28
9AM TO1 PM


March 19, 2011

Help me name my new hen...


Well, we went to the first chicken swap of the season and came home with a Blue Laced Red Wyandotte. (the one on the right) She is a six month old pullet.

We have two white egg layers and a blue egg layer, so I wanted to add a brown egg layer to the mix.

Now I need help giving her a name...any suggestions??

March 14, 2011

Chicken Saddles

What is a chicken saddle? Chicken saddles are made to protect the hen's backs from the roosters claws during mating. When roosters mate with hens, the hens often have feather loss on their backs and shoulders.


Mandy over at http://mandysrabbitranch.blogspot.com makes and sells chicken saddles and recently had a photo contest. We won the photo contest with a picture of Olga. A few days ago, two fashionable chicken saddles arrived in the mail.

March 11, 2011

NH Chicken Swaps...

Chicken swaps are held throughout the state, giving people a chance to buy, sell and trade poultry.


Despite the name, you can find more than just chickens at a chicken swap. I have seen turkeys, guinea fowl, ducks, rabbits, plants, crafts, honey, maple syrup, and baked goods.


We got our girls at the chicken swap in Merrimack two years ago.


The first Swap for this season in NH...TILTON TRACTOR SUPPLY
630 WEST MAIN ST
TILTON NH
MARCH 19
9AM TO 1 PM

HOOKSETT OSBORNES AGWAY
343  LONDONDERRY TRNPK
HOOKSETT NH
MARCH 26
10AM  TO 2PM

MILFORD TRACTOR SUPPLY
191 ELM ST
MILFORD NH
APRIL 2
9AM TO 1PM

HILLSIDE MEADOW AGWAY
360 EAST MAIN ST
TILTON NH
APRIL 3
10AM TO 2PM

MERRIMACK TRACTOR SUPPLY
515 DANIEL WEBSTER HW
MERRIMACK NH
APRIL 9
9AM TO 1PM

GRIFFINBROOK LTD
174 RAYMOND RD
CANDIA  NH
APRIL 10
10AM TO 2PM

TILTON TRACTOR SUPPLY
630 WEST MAIN ST
TILTON NH
APRIL 16
9AM TO 1PM

CHICHESTER TRACTOR SUPPLY
307 DOVER RD  RT4
CHICHESTER NH
APRIL 23
9AM TO 1PM

January 25, 2011

Chickens and Cold Weather

It was -27 degrees when I got up on Monday morning. I immediately went to check on the chickens. During the spring/summer/fall they live outside in a small coop with a run and free range during the day. In the winter I move them into our garage/barn where they can escape drafts, harsh weather, and winter starved predators; and are more easily accessible.

They sleep in an extra large dog house which has an attached run. During the day, I give them the run of the barn.
Whenever I visit them, I can hear them clucking softly and calling to me before I even open the door from the breezeway.

On Monday morning I didn't hear a sound.

I had purchased a heat lamp for them but had read chickens were actually very hardy and could handle very cold temperatures, in the right conditions, as long as they were acclimated to the cold.

I use the deep litter method to insulate the ground (it is a dirt floor barn), Their house is insulated, and I always put them to bed with a crop full of grain. They have a wooden roost from a sapling tree and we attached a board to it so their bodies could better warm their feet. Still, I was really concerned when I heard it would be more than twenty below.

Well, the girls were alright but they did not talk to me all day.

This morning it was 2 degrees when I got up and the temps were going to come up out of the single digits. As soon as the girls heard me coming to them they started their soft clucking.

I think that has to be one of the sweetest sounds in the world!

January 11, 2011

Chicken catalogue...

The Murray McMurray Hatchery catalog came in the mail today. When my chicken catalogs come, I read them like a seed catalog. I love looking at the different breeds and day dream about buying two of this and three of that. However since I live in a neighborhood in town and know you have to order a minimum of 25 chicks – (because that's how many little chick bodies they need to keep warm in the mail) I know it isn’t possible for me.


I got my three "girls" at a chicken swap almost two years ago. They were six week old pullets and had already feathered out. It was amazing to see how different their personalities developed.








Olga is a Brahma and is the smallest but we feel she is the smartest and, by far, the friendliest. She isn’t the best in egg production but she more than makes up for it with her personality.
Oogna is an Americana. She is the least friendly of our hens but is the best egg producer. She lays two big blue eggs a day.
Orla is a White Chanticleer and is moderately friendly and moderate in egg production.


































Aside from the beautiful fresh eggs we receive from “the girls” they are so very entertaining to watch.  Sometimes I sit outside and watch them for hours. Another bonus is the manure they provide for our gardens.  Chicken manure is great for the garden and its nutrients break down faster than in cow manure.
The nutrient rundown for poultry manure: four times the nitrogen content of cow manure, six times the phosphate, three times the potash, five times the calcium and three times the magnesium.
There are a lot of gardeners in my neighborhood. Last summer our postal carrier often remarked that our gardens were ahead of the neighbors due to the chicken manure.