Pastured Rabbits Get an Upgrade

Goldilocks here….  the floor to the pen was just not to my liking in the long run.  The rabbits didn’t escape, but  I kept looking for a way for them to get the most grazing that they can and a little more comfortable on their feet.  And having one big roof was a wind catcher whenever I raised it in the winter to feed the rabbits.

So here is the newest version.  On the floor, I have strips of flat aluminum .75″ wide, .125″ thick, 72″ long placed with a 2″ space between them, except for the first one on either side is closer to the edge, just to make sure they can’t get out if (when) there are lumpy spots in the field. This allows the rabbits to rest comfortably on the ground without the strips being above the ground or thick enough to be uneven with the ground as wood would be.

I screwed the middle of each strip to a 2×2 piece of lumbar that was part of the frame so when I lift it up, the weight of the rabbits don’t make the aluminum bow. One end has a 2′ x 4′ “house”/box with a separate hinged roof.  The main roof is PVC lattice work, only because I had it lying around in the barn, so I used it.  Additional pens will be with wire as on the sides and I’ll add shade cloth for summer time if necessary.  

I used 1″ x1″ vinyl coated chicken wire (which I HATE to have to stretch) for the sides.  Think I may go with hardware cloth next time.

 I created a hay rack out of 2″x2″ fencing with wood top and bottom to keep it flat.  I found that 2″ x 4″ is big enough for the rabbits to push thru and literally sit in the hay rack and eat.. and poo and pee… 1″ x 2″ wire is possible to use, but it is kinda tough for the bunnies to get the hay.  2″x 2″ seems a perfect size.  The hay rack goes all the way up to the top so again, the rabbits can’t jump in the rack and sit and eat. It is big enough to put a whole flake of alfalfa in.  The bottom is angled in but stops about 2 ” above the floor and is open so the rabbits can get at the hay very easily but can’t climb in (I don’t think…)  

Looking down into the box, you can see the plastic grid flooring, which is supported underneath all four edges as well as in the center to prevent bowing under the rabbit weight.  You can see the alfalfa in the hay rack as well.

The front of the house is closed off half way to give some shelter from wind and rain in the winter.  I will place nest boxes in that corner.

I switched to gravity drip waterers attached to 5 gallon buckets, which in the winter should weigh the pen down enough not to blow away, and the opaque color HOPEFULLY will prevent algea growth… something else I hate dealing with.

We’ll see if 2″ spaces are too big or if they are j-u-u-u-u-s-t right !

Honey Harvest

I’m so excited, I almost can’t stand it.  I’ve ordered the glass jars, found a way to press the honey without a lot of trouble, got a food grade bucket to put the extracted honey, made up labels for the jars…. IT’S HONEY HARVEST TIME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!   I hope……..  

In a few days when the jars arrive, I’ll don my bee suit and take a top box off at least one hive, to see how things look.  My only concern is estimating 50 lbs of honey…. that’s approximately what I need to leave on the hives.  If I wasn’t such a kid about it I would wait til Spring to take any honey off, but I can’t….  I’m hoping to have some 2 oz jars for folks who want to buy just enough to taste the honey first and some 8 oz. jars for the hard core honey folks.    

Please let there be honey, please let there be honey, please let there be honey…………..

Honey flow

Chicks at 7 Weeks

The Newest Generation of Yankee Hens

Almost 2 months old… T minus 15 weeks til they begin to produce more eggs.  I moved them out onto pasture the other day after work.  Think I’m going to try some electrical fence netting to allow them more pasture when they are older but keep them separate from the older flock.  That way I can see if the older flock is truly spent or just on holiday for right now.

7 week old chicks in Their New Digs

These guys seem a bit flightier than the last bunch.  Or maybe just young with extra energy.  Hard to believe there are 50 that I put in the coop, but I counted them as I transferred them…  So I’m up to about 110 chickens.

They will stay confined in the coop until they are full grown and have a better chance of fending off small predators like cats. At this age and size, they make a nice tasty meal for a feline. Having already lost a bunch of chickens to something in the back field earlier this summer, I’m a little more cautious.

Reality is Relative

 First Umpire: “I calls ‘em as I sees ‘em.”

Second Umpire: “I calls ‘em as they is.”

Third Umpire: “They ain’t nothing ’til I calls ‘em!”

Guess which perspective I like?  L.M.

Dog Days of Summer

Another hot week, another drop in egg production.  It’s 104 today. The heat has certainly taken a toll on the hens. You can see them panting, in spite of staying in the shade most of the day…. Things hopefully will cool off later in the week and for long enough to get back to normal. 

 I’ve realized over the past few years that “getting back to the nature” can involve some unpleasant results, like not enough eggs from time to time.  But the other option is the confined, air conditioned environment like the commercial egg farms.  And we all know where that leads.  So, I’d prefer to put up with a few disappointments.  I hope those of you who buy my eggs understand.

In the meantime, there is another new flock in the brooder being started, which won’t help right now, but will in about 4 more months or so… I was hoping to balance out the lower production when the days got shorter in the winter with more hens… guess I should have started them sooner.  But, hey, they are all doing well so far… this is the first batch where nary a one has died!! I should say that quietly so I don’t jinx myself…. I’d like to think I’m getting better at this.

So Much For “Contact”

My apologies for anyone trying to contact me using, of all things, the “Contact” Page.  It apparently isn’t working anymore…  Anyway, I put the email you can reach me at the top of the page just under the title…. YankeeAcres@hotmail.com should do the trick… Again, my apologies.

The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly

So, this new blog has had it’s technical headaches, but all in all I think it will work.  Still doing some tweaking. 

I decided to add some advertisements on the right side for those companies that I’ve done business with and found their products to be good.  Well, except for the Google ads that I just took off. 

Google is supposed to “read” your site and place ads based on your subject matter, so it is relevant to your readers. Sounds good, right?  As an avid Internet research freak, I thought it would produce some good leads on stuff I didn’t know about. I figured I’d have a little patience and see if after a few days of crawling around my site, Google would figure out what I’m about.  HA! Apparently, I’m about Terminix chemicals and bee removal. WTF?!?! Every time I went to the site to see what was there, that freakin’ Terminix ad would be blinking at me… GRRRRR!!!  OK, so I have no patience.  Rip that sucker off the site!

The other ads I like, have personal experience with the companies, so I thought you might too.

The Dogwise site is a great source for all sorts of dog information.  Well beyond the usual pet store garbage.

Richter’s is a Canadian nursery where I get my STERILE variety of comfrey…. meaning it doesn’t propagate by seed, so is controllable.  Actually, it is the ONLY place I can find that kind of comfrey.  It’s to be used as feed for the rabbits and chickens, high in protein…. NO- SOY protein, yippee!!!

Bocking 4 Comfrey

JB pets has lots of dog supplies and I order quite a bit of stuff like the Perla dog beds, (the only ones so far the dogs haven’t destroyed)  and dog toys and such.

Zazzle is where I’ve created some paper products from my old landscape photos… postcards, business cards, note cards, that sort of thing. You can customize  the text in just about all of them to suit you. 

Basically, I wanted to show what I use, since, if you like the info on my blog, you might find the resources here helpful.  Many hours, nay days and weeks,have been spent researching and trying different products and dealing with companies. For example, I think I’ve tried every chicken feeder on the market. Eventually, I might do “reviews” of specific stuff when I can find the time. Or, if you have a question, just leave a comment and I’ll answer it.

I’m looking to offer resources without looking like a flippin’ e-billboard.  One can only try….

Signing off for now,

Goldilocks (too hot to cold too big too little too hard too soft…..ahhhh, just right!)

My Honey Bees are Pigs

Three Warre Hives

Who would have guessed?  Feeding honey bees…. well, now that I’ve been keeping bees for all of a few months, I can see the need, at least in the beginning. They have no reserves from the previous year in their new hive and the nectar wasn’t flowing when they were installed in the early spring.       

So I had tried quail feeders at first but the bees drank the honey too fast to make it worth while. Then I moved to the 3 gallon chicken waterers because I happened to have some lying around.  That was better size-wise, but when the level got too low the bees would crawl into the reservoir and drown. So, just to last the next few weeks, I took the container off and left just the dish filled with wood shavings so the bees had something to stand on while drinking.  Very few drowned bees, but not so good in the rain for obvious reasons.        

Honeybees Feeding on Sugar Water

But, good golly, Miss Molly!! They suck up the sugar-water like there is no tomorrow.  I can’t tell you how many bags of sugar I’ve bought.. the 25 lb bags. I haven’t looked in the hives since the last time I wrote about them, but I’m wondering if I need to add another box to the Warre hive for all the sugar they are consuming. So on goes the bee suit, minus one glove that the dogs ate.  Just call me the Michael Jackson of beekeepers.  One of my English Shepherds, Cinnamon, gives me a look, that I swear, says very clearly, “WTF?!?! You look like a moron.”  Yeah, well, who ate the freakin’ glove, Missy?!?! PHRUMPF! I know she means the suit with the mesh headgear, not the missing glove, but I have to defend myself somehow…. We part ways in the middle field.   

For the future, I found a site that builds Warre Hives and they also have neat top feeders that I plan to get to make it easier to feed the bees… for the rest of the year, it seems.  PIGS!!!  The website, by the way, is appropriately called The Warre Store  . ( The hives pictured here are by a local guy in the Portland area.)  

Busy Honeybees Entering the Hive