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Thursday, December 28, 2017

It's Friggin' Cold!

It was -19 this morning! -28 with the wind chill! Brrrrrrrrrrrr!

I was worried about my featherbabies in the turkey room this morning as it's not as warm as my two coos, so brought everyone into the living room to hang out and warm up a bit.

Mindy, the turkey is such a troublemaker! She was jumping up on stuff and grabbing stuff! Good things she's cute!


Buddha my pug didn't mind the featherbabies in the living room; he ate their food! what a puggie piggie!




My two indoor cats, Ziggy and gus were kind enough to share the heat with the two silkie babes, Han and Jin.


stay warms friends!

Wednesday, December 27, 2017

FreshBed Horse Bedding

I recently saw an ad on Kijiji for FreshBed horse bedding and thought I'd check it out encase it was good for my chickens and ducks etc. The guy selling it was offering free delivery and was selling it for $6 a bag. I was hesitant to buy a large amount of bags as I wasn't sure how it'd work, so the guy kindly dropped me off two free bags to try.


So, far I LOVE it!

It's compressed wood. You add water to it and it expands a LOT.  It's made from about ten different types of wood and has almost no wood smell. It's made here in Nova Scotia.

I decided to try it as a cat litter. Cats loved it and have been using it perfectly. It took about 5% of a bag to fill two litter pans. It clumps up just like a normal clumping cat litter with cat urine and the poops are easy to remove. I was spending about $20 a month on cat litter. The FreshBed bedding cost $6 a bag and one bag will definitely last a month, maybe more.

Next I tried it in the guinea pig cage; she loved it too! It's soft on her feet, easy to make a warm bed in and doesn't have a huge overpowering smell of cedar and pine chips.

I haven't tried it yet for the chickens and ducks. Normally I use hay/straw for the featherbabies, but I think the freshbed will be better- more absorbent, warmer and better smell control. It normally retails for $7 a bag, so even buying it at full price from the feed store it wouldn't cost more that what I pay yearly for hay.

If you have critters and are looking for new bedding/litter options, I highly recommend it. I don't think you'll find it in a normal pet store, you'll need to go to a farmer's feed store.

wishing you all a great day! hugs and love!







Sunday, December 24, 2017

Happy Holidays!

Hi! Sorry I have't blogged in a couple of weeks. I've been super busy with holiday work/sales.

I had a Doctor appointment last week. Got my test results from my stomach ultrasound. My kidney, gallbladder etc is all good, but I got a crap load of gas in my stomach. The Doctor gave me some pills to try to settle it down. I also had a sinus infection so she gave me some antibiotics

all my critters are doing great. Thankfully no more loses!

It was both my son's birthday and my chihuahua's birthday on Saturday. here's a pic of them both when they were babies! Soooooo cute!


My two silkie babies are growing up! Sadly, it looks like one is a boy :( 


                And three of my cats - The Princess of Power, Grumpy Gus and Ziggy Fluffbutt


I've been making pine smudge sticks to sell in my Etsy store. They take a month or so to dry to be able to use. I made up about 20 of them, if they sell Ill make up more! My etsy store just hit 101 sales! Not bad for my first year.


And last pic! My silly ducks all trying to drink from the same pan. There was two others, but I guess they sucked. :)


Wishing you all a very happy holidays! Hugs and love!

Friday, December 8, 2017

Zazzle Shirts

still looking for Xmas gifts? check out my collection of shirts on Zazzle! I have over 200 available/ All the designs are available on all their different shirts - tank tops, tshorts, sweatshirts, hoodies, men's, women's and children's




Sunday, December 3, 2017

New Turkey Tom

Computer Blues and a New Turkey

Hi everyone! hope you are all doing great! My computer crashed this week. Totally died, had to get a new one. :( What a giant bummer. Was three days without a computer, which sucked big time, ad I'm still trying to get the new computer set up correctly. It has Windows 10. I hate Windows 10!!!! On a good note, all my photos, music and assorted info was saved; a friend was able to remove the hard drive from the dead computer and transfer it to my computer. Thank the Gods!

I got a new turkey today! YAY! Finally a friend for Mindy.It's a boy for sure and wow is it ever bigger than Mindy! and pretty well the same age. Mork was definitely a girl! His name is Marty, Marty McFly :) He is a bourbon red crossed with a wild Eastern turkey. He looks much like Mindy, just bigger




i have a video of when he first got dropped off. It's up loading on 
youtube, i'll post it soon :)

At the moment, Mindy doesn't like Marty. but I'm sure she will, just takes a bit of time ;)

Hugs and Love!





Sunday, November 26, 2017

Another Loss

I lost another hen yesterday. This time it was one of my beloved Silver Laced Wyandottes, Stephie. I'm mad. Stephie and her sister Ruth (named after two dear friends) are my two oldest hens, about five years old. They came from Ontario with me. I'm about ready to buy a gun and shoot the foxes! I've had enough of this shit! I get everything has to eat, but my featherbabies are NOT supper!

Stephie is the lovely hen that posed for the newspaper with me for my book review. Being almost five years old, she was only laying one egg a week, but damn, she was a beloved pet! She was one of my Ontario bitches. She was MINE!  I've gone past sad and am now just pissed! These foxes have started a war and they are NOT going to win! It doesn't help that my dogs are all seniors and seriously suck at taking care of the featherbabies. When I noticed Stephie was missing, I hollered for the dogs to come with me and hunt the forest. The only one to help was Taco! My canine security is now a chihuahua! My big Rottie/shepherd, Skully, doesn't like going outside anymore and I have to pry the pug off the couch! My new dog Ella (St Bernard/malamute), can't get here soon enough! Another 4 weeks to go! She's coming December 26-27. She's 3 years old and very protective and energetic. I need her here so badly! She actually hates being inside, so we love being outside protecting the featherbabies.


On a happier note, here's some cute pics I took yesterday

My silkie babes are getting bigger :)


This is my four Muscovy ladies- from left to right: Pringles, Skittles, Snickerdoodes and Nibs.



I'm still looking for a Turkey tom for Mindy. Since she is my only turkey right now (Gods! I hate those foxes!!!! GRRRRRRRR). she's been hanging with her coop mates, mama chicken Heckle and her babes, Jinxe, Marsh and Mallow. She's super protective of the silkie babes. 


Wishing you all a great day! I'll keep you updated on the fox situation! Hugs and love!


Friday, November 24, 2017

Muscovy Ducks, Scallops and a Melted Spatula.

We are happily back up to five Muscovy ducks! Someone here in Thorbrun, just a 7 minute walk away, had some Muscovy ducks for sale, so of course I bought two! 
Now I have Rocky and Skittles (the two we got early this summer that don't know how to swim and hate the pond. Rocky is my drake), Nibs (the remaining pond Muscovy) and the two new ladies, Snicker Doodles (the brown one) and her mom (no name yet). Snicker Doodles is three weeks older than Nibs and her mom is two years old.
Skittles is a little pissy about the new Muscovys, but she'll be fine by the end of the day. Rocky of course is very happy! He now has four ladies.
Being able to get an experienced mom is a huge score! Muscovys are great moms, but an experienced mom is worth her weight in gold! Now I have someone to hatch Saxony eggs next summer!
If we had to pick just one type of ducks, we would without a doubt pick Muscovys. They are smarter, calmer and have more personality than the other ducks.



I was gifted a bag of scallops earlier in the week. I've actually never had scallops before. Obviously, I've never cooked them before either.. I asked on Facebook and got a crap load of advice on how to cook them. Yesterday, we tried cooking two scallops (as a practice run for supper). We did as directed on Facebook. We used a cast iron frying pan, put in some butter, let it get super hot, put in the scallops, counted off two minutes, flipped them ... and our spatula melted!

I'm told by an executive chief that you should use two forks to flip them. Just don't pierce them! Ooops!
Lesson Learned!


The house filled with toxic smoke. We had to evacuate everyone. Had to carry out the guinea pig cage cause we were worried the smoke would hurt them. Put the guinea pig cage on the driveway, went back inside to get Skully out, came out to see Taco hoisting his leg on the cage! What an asshat1 At least the piggies were in their house and didn't get a golden shower!

Wishing you all a great day! Hugs and love!





Saturday, November 18, 2017

Foxes, Ducks, Dogs and a Dead Mole

WARNING: The last photo may be upsetting to some of my gentle friends (it shows a dead mole with his tummy ripped out)

We *think* we have found the predator that killed our featherbabies- FOXES! Not, one fox, but a young adult pair of siblings. This is the time of year that they leave mom and they often hunt in pairs for their first winter.

We found fox scat on the Kappa Trail (the trail that runs along the Kappa Cove, the front pond). We carefully inspected it and found both bones and feather quills in it. Foxes use their scat to mark their territory. They don't hide their poop; they poop on high spots so it is easily seen, usually on top of logs and rocks. This poop was on the ground, but on the high rise of the trail. The little fuckers had claimed the pond for their own! I'm so pissed with myself. This whole horribleness happened cause we allowed them to claim the pond area. We allowed them to move in. Honestly, it's been such a busy summer/fall, we totally slacked on keeping up proper patrols and marking the area around the pond. :(  I haven't walked the dogs very much down there in the last couple of months.What a hard lesson to learn.

This is fox scat

Nibs, the lone Muscovy duckling is doing OK. She was in shock and didn't eat on Tuesday/Wednesday/Thursday, but finally started to nibble yesterday. Today, she ate better and is starting to regain her normal Muscovy bad attitude. 

The pic below is Nibs having a bath in my bathtub. It sure ain't the pond, but it's better than nothing!


I have started a "campaign of Terror: all around the pond and the surrounding forest. My goal to scare away all the wildlife in the area. The safest way to live with wildlife is to have them scared of you. Wild animals should FEAR humans. Any wild animal that doesn't fear humans will end up dead. Did you know that it is illegal for wildlife rehab centers in Nova Scotia to release a wild animal that doesn't fear humans? Yep, it is! They have to euthanize the animal if it is too friendly! An animal that doesn't fear humans will end up hanging around us, and will either hurt us or we'll hurt them. If you love wild animals, you will not feed them or try to make friends with them, you will instead help ensure they fear us. (I'm talking about mammals, not birds)

My "Campaign of Terror" consists of stomping loudly around the forest at random times; having the dogs run around the pond/forest area, peeing and pooing, and disturbing everything; setting off blackcat firecrackers at random times; moving dog poop into the pond area; having men urinate in the woods; and destroying any potential homes. By making the lives of any wildlife in the area miserable, we will hopefully encourage them to move elsewhere. This has been our technique for the last seven years and it has always worked well. Before, this year, we had never lost more than three featherbabies in a year (spread out over several months). If the predator does not move, we will have to trap it and possibly kill it. I hope it leaves! If it doesn't not fear us and leave, it may die. That makes me sad, but I will do what I need to do to protect my flock.

This photo is of my Pug Buddha. We are back in the woods, behind the Foxes' kill spot


This is Skully. Where he is standing is where we found the first turkey feather. The turkey died at the base of the tree behind him.


And of course, my fireball Taco. The tree he is on runs to the pond. We are maybe 50 feet from where we found the dead ducks.


Yesterday, when we were out causing chaos in the forest, the dogs found this poor dead guy/ He's a mole. Dead maybe 2-3 hours. It was about 150 feet from the foxes' food larder (where we found the huge pile of turkey feathers and the three dead duck bodies). Not sure who killed it? It looks like it died from a tooth in the neck and the killer ate it's insides. They thing poking out is it's backbone. Maybe a domestic cat? Weasel/minx? maybe a fox, but I don't think so? 


Wishing you all a great weekend. LOVE AND HUGS!




Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Broken Heart

WARNING - DISTURBING PHOTOS on this post

Sorry, I didn't update on the missing turkey and chicken yesterday. it was a really bad day.

When I got up yesterday and went to the pond to check on the two Muscovy moms and their two babes, i found three of them missing; the two moms and Licorice, the drake that was stuck to the ice on Monday.

My son and I spent many hours outside yesterday, searching the forest for the missing ducks (and turkey and leghorn chicken).We focused our search near the front pond. I found three Muscovy feathers on the trail near the pond; they look like they belonged to Licorice.



We pushed deeper into the forest and found a turkey feather, we searched around and we found a huge pile of turkey feathers. We gathered up the feathers and went back to the house and compared them to our remaining turkey. sadly, an exact match.





We went back to the spot where we found the turkey feathers and about 50 feet away, we found white downy feathers, some covered in blood, and some black/green pin feathers. Our hearts sunk further, they were our duck Figgy's feathers


We searched further, pushing deeper into the forest, looking up into trees and looking down to see under them. About 100 feet away from the two feather piles, I caught a glimpse of white under a very think group of pine trees. 


We pushed through the pines trees and sadly found the three ducks. They were laid out side by side. Poor Mama Muscovy, my first duck ever, and my very favorite duck, had her chest ripped out and one of her feet ripped off. The other two Figgy and the babe, Licorice had minimal damage.




In addition to the ducks, we found a huge pile of assorted other bird feathers. The ones in the pic below are either owl or hawk. (I picked them all up)


After finding the bodies, we were very upset, so came back to the house.  After we pulled ourselves together we went back and gathered up the bodies (cause screw that! the predator isn't getting them!). They have been buried. 

So, now we gotta figure out who the predator is and then we need to trap it. It may be what killed my two old cats this summer. It needs to go!

If anyone is familiar with predators and has an idea who the culprit is please let me know. I'm thinking fox, but not sure. thanks!






Monday, November 13, 2017

What a Day

I got up today at 7am like I always do. Went outside praying to see the missing turkeys and sadly no Mork. Went down to check the Muscovy ducks at the pond and found the one babe, Licorice was frozen to the ice on the pond, in the middle of the pond! Oh no! Somehow his tail feathers had completely frozen to the ice and he couldn't move. The ice is not very thick, not thick enough to support a human, so sadly we could not walk across it. The best we could do with wade in, breaking the ice in front of us as we went. It was so cold! and such exhausting work! The ice did not break easily. We made it out to the poor duck and broke the ice around him. Unfortunately he ended up losing half his tail :( Poor guy, We grabbed him up and literally with waded back to shore. We wrapped him in a towel and got to the house as quick as possible. After about ten minutes in the house Licorice started to come around and was able to walk again! about ten minutes after that we were able to get him back to his moms. What a scary experience!

We were frozen. We had hot showers and baths, but were still shivering. We got banged and cut up from the ice. I had 10am work which I cancelled as I was so cold and exhausted.

We spent the rest of the morning inside, getting warmed up and working online. I'm working on a new art design. Spent about 3 hours working on it when the hydro flashed off, good-bye art. :( sadly, art programs don't save art the way most writing programs do.

Went out in the afternoon and hunted for the missing turkey. Still can't find a sign of him. No blood, no feathers nothing.

At 5pm, when we went to put the featherbabies away, we were missing one leghorn chicken. Oh no!

I can only surmise that a missing turkey yesterday and a missing hen today means a predator. Both birds tend to hang on the edge of the woods at the back of the house. But what type of predator? It's gotta be something big enough to carry off a turkey and fast enough to get them without any fight.

Tomorrow, we will be out first things hunting for the missing hen and signs of the missing turkey. We gotta act quickly before we lose anymore.

I'm looking into getting a live trap, so I can get a trap down quickly encase it is a predator.

Fingers crossed that both the hen and turkey show up tomorrow!

Sunday, November 12, 2017

Help me reason this through

One of my beloved pet turkeys went missing today. I extremely upset. We worked hard to raise him and he was extremely tame. I adored him.

I'm very frustrated and can't figure out where he is, maybe you can help?

Help me reason this through:

Missing turkey (Mork) was here at noon, was noticed gone around 2:30pm. We spent two and a half hours looking and calling for it. We searched all around the house and quite deep into the surrounding forest.We searched around both ponds. We looked up into trees and we searched the ground for signs of a fight, feathers and/or blood. we found nothing.

The turkey is large (about 6 pounds), can fly quite well (up onto roofs and into trees), is strong, quick,and would fight.

The other Turkey (Mindy) was at the front of the house at 2:30. She did not seemed distressed, yet at bedtime she gave us a hard time about going in and was sitting on the porch, watching for her friend looking quite sad. The two turkeys are rarely far apart. It seems extremely strange that one would wander off without the other.

There is no sign of a predator anywhere. No blood, no feathers, nothing. The roosters did not sound the alarm today (we have three roosters that do a good job watching for predators), Skully did not growl (which he always does when coyotes are near); the little dogs did not bark, the ducks were around the house all day (cause the pond has ice) and they were calm. Heck, the cats were calm all day. No one gave a predator alert.

Google says that female turkeys will occasionally run off with wild turkeys. Travis thinks he heard wild turkeys in the area 4-5 days ago. We are still not sure what sex Mork is. maybe he's a she. But, why would one run off and not the other? And I would assume females run off to get males, wouldn't they do that at sexual maturity? Mork is only 4 months old; he/she won't be sexually mature than spring.

Mork is pretty big. A fisher couldn't carry him off. We would of found feathers/blood. A fox? maybe, but wouldn't he go after a chicken instead? Turkeys are pretty big. There was 25 chickens (4 chicks) and 11 ducks hanging out in the same area as the turkeys. Bald eagle? possible, but no rooster warning? My rooster always crow when eagles circle.Bald Eagle would of taken the turkey in a clearing (not under the trees), where is the feathers and blood? Coyote? maybe? But, Skully didn't growl? Really?! and the roosters didn't notice? and Mork went down without a fight? I find it really hard to believe that this turkey would of went down without a fight. There is a bobcat in the area ... broad daylight, close to a house?

Maybe he wandered off and got lost? It's possible. But, why didn't he come when called? And why'd he wander off without his turkey friend? The turkeys generally stay very close to the house, usually close to the mama chicken and chicks (they are all coop mates).

Maybe he was sick and we didn't notice, and he wandered off to die the way animals do? He seemed extremely healthy. Growing well, eating well, his bathrooms were normal, eyes bright, etc etc. maybe we just missed his body under all the branches and leaves?

Maybe a predator got him and we just missed the fight scene? We will continue searching for signs tomorrow. I'm gonna split the forest into sections and carefully search each section.

I really need to know what happened. I lost two beloved cats back in July that just mysteriously disappeared. no sign of either of them. I just can't lose another critter with no explanation! If there is a large predator on the property like a bobcat, I need to know. There is a black bear on the property, but black bears generally don't kill other animals.

If anyone has any ideas, I would love to hear them!

I'll update you tomorrow if he shows up or a find anything while searching.


Thursday, November 2, 2017

Ella

A friend in SW Ontario, near Chatham, recently took in a St Bernard/Malamute. Unfortunately, my friend just had two knee surgeries and simply cannot keep up to her exercise needs. Rehoming a dog this size is not easy. We would love to get the dog here to me, but sadly that's not easy as I'm three provinces away. Betty has started a go-fund me to help raise some money to pay for transport costs. If you can pitch in a bit it would be greatly appreciated. Ella has already been rehomed a couple of times and deserves a forever home. Thanks!!

https://www.gofundme.com/x75p7n-get-ella-to-her-forever-home


Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Chicks and Ducklings

The chicken chicks are doing great. They are growing quickly and are very active and healthy. However, I have a bit of an unforeseen problem. The black chick, Jinxie, is 4-5 days older and due to her breeds, she is much bigger and more athletic than her two Silkie sisters are. Mama chicken likes to perch up on a big stick with the turkeys at night. Her black chick has no problem flying up beside her, but the two Silkies cannot fly and are left cold on the floor by themselves. 


Mama chicken wants to start going outside and Jinxie, her baby is definitely ready to go out with her, but the two Silkies really are not :( They are simply too small and not tough enough yet.

So, what do I do? 

Time for tough decisions.

I hopefully have a male Turkey coming on Saturday, so would love to get mama chicken out of the turkey room. So, I'm thinking of letting mama chicken and her black chick out today so they can start becoming part of the flock. A couple of days they should be able to move into the chicken coop. I'm hoping Jinxie, the black chick will join Fonzi's flock (he's the Frizzle I got earlier in the summer. He only has two girls so could use another). The two Silkie chicks I'm going to move into the huge dog crate and than they can stay in the livingroom like the turkeys did for a month or two, until they are big enough to go with the rest of the flock. Silkie chickens are a bantam breed, which means they are smaller than a normal chicken. Honestly, I'm not a big fan of bantam breeds. I prefer big tough chickens. I really didn't want Silkies, but they were the only ones available nearby when the black chick was born and all alone. My rooster Wally is a Silkie, so I'm hoping he will take them into his flock once they are old enough. One nice thing about Silkies is that they tame very easily, so by moving them into the livingroom, they tame quickly and will be excellent animal ambassadors for the farm.



The Muscovy ducklings are growing quickly. They are almost as big as their moms now! The photo above shows the three ducklings, the two moms and the dad. Rocky, their dad is quite large. Unfortunately, I'm pretty sure two of the ducklings are boys, which will have to be sold. So, I ended up with only one more girl Muscovy.

Wishing you all a wonderful day! Hugs and love!






Sunday, October 15, 2017

A Tale of Two Hens

Well, my two turkeys, Mork and Mindy, are both girls! Damn, how'd that happen? I gotta be the stupidest person around to have missed that. They look identical! Duh!


When I got them as poults, the guy I got them from said he thought they were a male and female, and as one was bigger than the other I totally believed him and never questioned it. It made me blind to seeing the obvious.

Today, I posted their photo on a Facebook group (Maritime Fowl) and everyone on there told me they are two girls! I googled 3 month old Turkey Tom and got photos like this one:


How'd I miss that? 

I'm feeling pretty stupid right now. I guess I thought the tail would come up later in the male.

It's amazing how easily we believe things!

So now I am searching for a Tom turkey for my two ladies. It's a hard time of year to find one. I might have to wait for next summer (which will put me a year behind on breeding). I put an ad on Kijiji and asked on local Facebook groups. Hopefully someone has a young male to sell!

Damn!

And I need new names for the ladies! Mork and Mindy obviously doesn't work.


On a bright note, at least it wasn't two Toms (cause I'd have to rehome one)

Hugs and love!




Monday, October 9, 2017

Memoirs of An Exotic Dancer- PDF


Hi! I no longer sell individual photo sets/videos. As I am pretty well retired and only do photo sets/videos by requests now (so if you want anything special feel free to contact me!), I am selling all my photos and videos from 2010 to 2017 as one big set for a low price. It's 3GB of photos and videos; 1300+ photos and 15+ videos. 

If you'd like it in digital format via email, it costs $25. It is 3GB, so will take you awhile to download it! 

If you'd like a physical copy: DVD cost $30/ Flash drive/SD card costs $36; shipping included)

You can pay via interac bank transfer or cash. 

You can also purchase my "Memoirs of an Exotic Dancer" in PDF format on Etsy (you can also purchase my photo set via Etsy)


Thank you! Hugs and Kisses!!

 Please contact me directly at roguewolf-imphavok@hotmail.com 

Sunday, October 8, 2017

Freerange vs. Penned

Sadly, I lost another Muscovy duckling to a bird of prey yesterday. That's two ducklings that I have now lost to a predator. :( Obviously this makes me extremely unhappy. Every time I lose a featherbaby to a predator, I go through the same thing; I second guess myself on freeranging and wonder if they'd be safer if they were penned. However, it only takes a quick visit to any of the poultry oriented Facebook groups that I am on, to remind me, my decision to freerange is the right decision. Reading  daily posts from people losing every one of their birds because something go in the pen is heartbreaking. I can't even imagine losing all my birds at once. That would be devastating. It would also be extremely expensive and would be a serious blow for any small farmer. I've seen people lose 50 plus birds from one predator getting into their pen. That's a hard thing to recover from!

Many people think that penned birds are safer than freerange birds are, but I strongly disagree. As a freeranger, I lose a couple of birds each year. In the 15 months I've been in Nova Scotia, I've lost 5 birds to predators ( two chickens (killed by land mammals); one adult Muscovy duck (killed by a bald eagle) and now the two ducklings). I've had chickens for about 6 years and on average I lose two chickens per year. So, in the 6 years, I've had birds for, I've lost a little less than 20 birds. That's not that bad.

Farmers that pen their birds will go several years without losing any; however, when disaster hits them, it hits hard! Problem is that there will always be predators and trying to keep a pen secure 24 hours a day is hard, eventually someone will get in, and when they do, it will kill every bird in the pen.

When a predator attacks a freerange bird, the other birds have a chance to run like hell. But, when a predator gets in a pen, there is no where for the birds to run, they cannot escape and the predator ends up slaughtering them all.

Here in Nova Scotia, the biggest predator of chickens and ducks are birds of prey, so people who pen their poultry have to also cover the top of their pen. If you don't cover the top of the pen, you might as well not pen them at all, as a eagle or hawk will get the chickens or ducks.

Although I don't pen my birds, I still do many things to help ensure their safety

- I ensure there is lots of places for them to get cover- trees, bushes etc. Heck, I even started parking our truck in an area that had no cover just in case one of the chickens or ducks was in the area and needed cover quickly./

- I have good males; roosters, drakes and Toms. I went the longest time without a rooster as I was worried he would be too loud and drive me crazy, now I'd never be without one! I have two excellent roosters and I have good drakes, and I have a turkey Tom to help protect the flock. Good males watch the skies and help to keep their charges safe! My Muscovy drake Rocky fought a hawk this summer and saved the chick the hawk was after. Good males make a difference!

- Cats and Dogs: My cats have saved my chickens more times than I can count. They chase foxes, fishers, rats and other small predators off the property. My dogs help to keep the larger predators away such as coyotes. I encourage them to pee around the coops and around the property edges to help keep predators away.

- Bird of Prey Deterrents: In the main area the flock hangs out in, I have hung CDs and crisscrossed ropes. The CDs flash in the sun which deters birds of prey and the ropes make it difficult for a large bird to swoop in.

- Patrols: Us humans patrol the property regularly. During the day, we make sure we walk a patrol from the coops to the pond every two hours and during the evening we do patrols mid evening and right before bed. We try to be big noisy stinky humans and let the wild animals know we are there. We don't want any wild animals up around the house and coop area, so go out of our way to scare them away. We do have a bear that lives on the property. He is very welcome. We feel privileged that he lives here, but he is not welcome in the area around the house. Wild animals are generally afraid of humans and we try to use that to our advantage.

- Larger Birds: I've noticed that as a general rule, the smaller the bird, the more danger its in. The two hens we lost here in Nova Scotia were both small (One was only 2 months old and the other was a skinny leghorn) We try to purchase only large breeds of both chickens and ducks. The larger the bird, the less likely it will be prey for eagles and hawks.

- Security Camera; I also recently purchased a security camera so I could keep an eye on the flock even better. At the slightest sign of trouble us humans with dogs can be outside in seconds.

- A super secure coop: If a predator manages to get in a coop, they can slaughter everyone in a very short time. I check our coop daily in an attempt to ensure its secure. In the evening, after dark, I walk around the coop with a flashlight (Being a loud stinky human) to help scare anyone with ill intent away. I also encourage the dogs to mark the coop.

- Guinea hens: I don't have any yet, but I plan on adding guinea hens to my flock asap. Guinea hens are extremely observant and watch for predators constantly. They will scream an alert if they think a predator is nearby. They are suppose to be especially good for watching the skies.

All farmers lose livestock, it just is what it is. It hurts the heart and the wallet. We do the best we can. Most of us small farmers care deeply for our "livestock' and do everything we can to keep them healthy and safe. Being a farmer is not an easy job.

I also freerange as it's healthier for the birds, and saves me a fair amount of money. The chickens are amazing foragers and get 90% of their own food during the spring, summer and autumn. In addition to saving on food, I also don't have to purchase grit for the birds as they find it naturally themselves, and I rarely have to give them calcium for their eggs as they get such a balanced diet foraging. My chickens eat weeds, insects, snakes, small rodents, frog and toads and anything else they can find. My ducks love weeds and grass and also eat insects and fish they catch at the pond. If they were penned, they could still get some of their own food, but not near as much as they can freeranging.

Hugs and love!!



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Monday, October 2, 2017

October

Well, it's October already. Wow! Where does the time go? I haven't blogged much of late cause I haven't been feeling the best. Lots of body pain, fatigue and breathing problems. I'm ok though :) Just moving a little slow.

I went to my annual specialist appointment last week. She said I didn't have Celiac disease (which I was pretty sure I didn't have), but instead thinks I have Fibromyalgia and IBS. She still has no idea why my iron was/is so low. Thankfully I got a family doctor and also had an appointment with her last week too. I saw her the day after the specialist. She was super nice. She is actually a nurse practioner; Nova Scotia was short on family Doctors so decided to let the NP do it. I am super happy as I've always found nurses nicer than Doctors. My new NP thinks maybe there is something wrong with my gallbladder (I don't think), so she scheduled an ultrasound for me). She also order bloodwork on 22 different things! She wants to rule out everything so we can figure out what's wrong.

I lost one of my Muscovy ducklings today :( When I went down around 10:30am one was just gone. I spent several hours searching around the pond for it and found no trace of tracks, blood or feathers. I also went to my back pond and looked around there in case a bird of prey took the poor thing there to eat it. I could not find a trace of it anywhere. The Muscovy moms and babes were all very subdued today and the moms kept the kids safely in the dog house much of the day. I believe a bird of prey, a hawk or eagle, got it. So sad. I get the whole circle of life thing, but damn, my pets should not be part of someone else's food chain. :(

We've had frost here the last couple of nights. Most of vegetable garden is dead now. I didn't do very well with the veggies this year. I need more fertilizer. As always, I'll try again next year.

And time for some shameless self promtion :) LOL!

Check out all my Tshirt designs on Zazzle
Just click on the photos

Friday, September 15, 2017

Silkie Chicks

Since all the chicks died, but the one little black and white one, I had to go out and buy two chicks. Sigh ... this whole buying chick thing is really counterproductive to my whole saving money by breeding my own thing. Unfortunately, i cannot have just one chick. Once the chick hits around two months old, mom will leave it and then it will be all alone with no close friends/siblings. It would get picked on and be horribly lonely.So, I got two silkie chicks to go with it. Silkies are an adorable, small, very tame breed. Honestly, it's not a breed I wanted to add to my flock, I prefer larger more aggressive chickens as they aren't preyed upon as much, but pickings are slim this time of year and it was a choice of drive 40 minutes and buy silkie chicks for $8 each or drive 2 hours and pay $7 a chick for barnyard mixes. 






They are ridiculously cute! They make wonderful friends for my black and white chick and hopefully they are both female and will become part of my Frizzle Fonzi's flock. If you cross a Silkie and a frizzle you get a Sizzle (It's like a designer dog breed )

Hugs and love!



Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Hatchling Update

Sadly, the little yellow chick that was born yesterday morning died and I found another chick this morning that died halfway out of the shell  Thankfully, the little black chick is doing fantastic and Heckle still has three viable eggs. Maybe one of the other eggs will hatch! I really need one more chick so the little black one has a friend. If I have to, I'll go out and purchase one.

We also have a Saxony duck sitting on eggs. Went through her eggs this morning and she only had three incubating, so took away all the others. It would be nice if a couple of Saxony would hatch as I have people wanting to purchase some.

It's really not the right time of year for hatching, so not going to allow anyone else to go broody. We'll try again next year. At least we ended up with some hatchlings this summer.

The six little Muscovy hatchlings are 7-9 days old now and doing fantastic.

Wishing you all a wonderful Tuesday! Hugs and love!