I think I can honestly say that I am having a harder time with the waiting, for Sassafras to have her calf, than I did with birthing my own children! (Laughing but I'm serious).
Wednesday, June 28, 2017
The waiting game
I think I can honestly say that I am having a harder time with the waiting, for Sassafras to have her calf, than I did with birthing my own children! (Laughing but I'm serious).
Wednesday, May 3, 2017
Anticipation is building!
Although there was some doubt initially as to whether I had actually gauged the heat cycles in my mini Jersey cow correctly, I believe it is safe to announce that she is pregnant & her little bundle of joy is set to arrive sometime in late June, or early July.
If her little one is born on 7/4 it will be named Freedom, which can be either a male or female name. If it isn't born exactly on the day I'd like, it's ok. I still may be name it Freedom, but another name that's optional if it's a girl, is Honey, because Dad's honeybees paid for the some of the expenses necessary to pull this off.
I wanted to sit down & "record" some of the information I learned from the second inseminator, (Elmer Detwieler) but I didn't have time at that point, because I was trying to do to much. I thought I would have the opportunity to come back to it, but one thing led to another, as it always does, & here we are.
We've come through 7/9 months, she has approximately 60 days to go, a little less, & I have forgotten a lot of what he shared with me.
Elmer is a very unique, information rich individual. While observing her during the initial heat, that we missed** he revealed just how much information he had in his brain concerning artificial insemination, & cows in general. 30+ years, living in multiple countries as an AI, using the AI training to be a missionary... Working with lots of different breeds of cattle, & how each breed is different... The entire conversation was highly educational.
** (Elmer said it was OK, he'd rather we miss a half hearted heat & KNOW the cycle, than to guess & waste the semen straw)
Along the way, prior to beginning the process of getting her bred, I had her checked & dehorned by the vet. While he was out, the vet shared how exciting it was for him that I had gotten a mini in the first place, because it gave him a reason to go learn more about them since they're so rare. More than that though, I learned through that conversation that Rick Ultz... Yes THAT Rick Ultz, is this areas leading expert on jerseys! I was flabbergasted! Imagine the chances of that happening! All these years I've known, looked up to & respected this man, who has quietly been an expert on something that I love but never had the money to get into till last year!
As Sassy was 15-months when I got her, & of course being that young has never had a calf before, & I have never been responsible for a cow who's been bred before... We're both calving virgins so to speak. So I'm praying it all goes smoothly... Praying hard actually! ☺
I've grown to love that little cow. ❤ She's become like another child to me... & It would break my heart if something were to happen to her because of my stupidity in this matter.
But, the Lord has a plan. If he didn't, she wouldn't have fallen in my lap back when I saw the ad sin the paper. The semen shipment wouldn't have come together like it did, & nothing would have gone as smoothly as it has...
Monday, August 15, 2016
The newest addition to our little hobby farm: Sassafras
In all of the hustle and bustle of parenthood, we still have to live, and in "living" we've had several livestock related adventures. Specifically due to having a 3-year old and a 1-year 5-month year old, who both find great enjoyment in our animals.
On June 30, 2016 I purchased a 15-month old miniature-midsize jersey and named her Sassafras.
Her lineage is of miniature stock, but she grew to be 1" too tall to suit the prior owner (he was seeking to have an entirely miniature herd), and so chose to sell her to me for $1,600. She is a dark brown, nearly black color, with lighter colored "socks" on her legs, and lighter colored "stripes" down her spine. (Photo shows what I mean)
She had horns when I purchased her, so those had to come off immediately, and let me tell you what... I hope I never have to de-horn another cow for as long as I live!
Some of the registries require immense amounts of information; correct coloring in specific areas, conformation, head shape, etc. and because she is such a dark color, and lacks the prominent white ring around her nose, the woman running the main registry wouldn't accept her.
The backstory I was given on her and who her sires & dam's are cannot be verified any further than they already have so I can't really "fight" the refusal to allow registry.
I intend to keep highly detailed records, and to register her calf/calves but without having her full lineage confirming that she is the grandsire of Riverview Bobby (among other names), the lineage records starts with me. Perhaps if I stick with this, I will end up having a whole herd of miniature jersey's; who knows. Perhaps some day.
Through a neighbor we purchased some huge bales of straw to use as her bedding. 2 sections of that is more than enough to toss down on the floor of her pen, so I'll be doing well for bedding for a very very long time. She is so partial to the straw though that she has chosen to keep her "bed" separate from her other activities in the pen such as eating and discharging waste. This photo is of her laying down on her bed when she got bored of my presence in her pen. I guess she decided that if I wasn't going to give her anything to eat, and wasn't going to brush her, that I was no longer "useful" and so it was time to tell me to go away by laying down.
When I made the choice to purchase a miniature jersey cow, I was also making the decision to allow the chickens to become less prominent in our livestock ownership ventures for the time being.
I need the income from the eggs, but one of the main contributing factors on the decision to ease off on the chickens, was concerning my oldest son's fear of the birds because they have pecked his hands a few times thinking that he had food. The second factor was that I had a big old swamp coon that was eating any bird he could get his talons into, and it was just not good business to continue purchasing chicks only to have them eaten by the swamp coon.
When Sassy first came home my son was even a little uneasy around her, because of not knowing if she would hurt him or what she would do when he would come around but he has warmed up to her a lot, and even goes to the barn to scratch her and brush her without me now. He has been over-heard telling his grandmother that "Mommy's cow is pretty good! She is my favorite pet!" Which I enjoyed of course because I've been wanting a pet cow for about 8-years now.
One adventure which I was concerned would scare him, was the fact that during "standing heat", I was careless about watching my back, and she mounted me, pinning me against the fence until she was finished humping. My son watched the whole thing, and even though it hurt (she weighs in around 500lbs) I knew I had to talk to him about what he had just seen otherwise he would be fearful of her. But how do you explain to a 3-year old, why the cow had just mounted mommy and was humping her? It was quite comical I suppose, the way I was stumbling around trying to explain it in a way that he could understand, yet wouldn't scare him... yes I pulled it off. I basically just told him "Mommy is OK. Sassy is lonely. She wants Mommy to find a daddy cow for her to have a baby with." He looked at me very solemnly and said "OK Mommy". Later, he was talking to my sister and he said "Mommy got humped by the cow". Meg said "What!?" He repeated it, and she asked "Did you see this happen??" He nodded and repeated "I saw it!", then when he thought she didn't believe him he told her very emphatically "I'm not lying! I saw it Aunt Megan! I saw Mommy get humped by the cow! Sassy is lonely! She wants Mommy to find her a bull so she can have a baby!" My sister's jaw just hit the floor I guess... which kind of made the whole situation all the more hilarious than before because how many other people can say that they got humped by a cow in heat? And that their 3-year old has given his 20-year old aunt a bovine biology lesson! lol!
All in all I would say that Sassafras has been a good addition to our little farm. She has proven herself to be a sweet tempered little girl, and if all goes as planned, I will have her bred to a miniature jersey bull of the Dexter Corners lineage, by the end of the month. The bull resides in Texas at this point in time, but of course artificial insemination is always an option, and one which we are going to attempt this time around. DC Ebenezer is supposed to be within the size range I would like to see but is heterozygous polled, which means we have a 50% chance of horns.
** Sassy is 100% horned, I had her DNA tested during the registry negotiations so I would know exactly how likely we would be to having a horned calf, as well as if she had any DNA issues that I should be concerned with such as having the bull dog gene (a gene malformation in Dexter cattle; some people will cross dexters with jerseys in an effort to accomplish size requirements. It's a method of cutting corners instead of actually doing the breeding correctly.
Updates on the cattle breeding adventures to follow!
Sunday, April 24, 2016
Butchered 4 roosters; unexpected adventures
It was a nice day, I thought "OK this one reader person has asked for photos of the butcher process, I'm feeling OK, & I need to stop putting this off... let's get this done." Got all the stuff around for it, started boiling the water, and headed for the barn to catch the intended "victims". I think they must have sensed that their time had come because although I was able to catch 2 of the 4, the other 2 evaded me to the very end, even after using my pistol to try to take them out. Finally, I thought "Fine, I'll just do these two, maybe I can catch the other two later after I've gotten these done...", however in the meantime I handed my dad my pistol (because I got frustrated and fed up chasing birds..) and even my dad got fed up.
While Dad was chasing down the other two, I got my gloves and went for the kill cage (an old dog crate used to isolate them until they are ready for death) to catch a roo. There were two in there, both were larger than I normally like to butcher, both with long long spurs, but I thought this would be to my advantage for an easier time cleaning them. It was not. These two big roosters ganged up on me and rushed me at the door as I went for them, both flapping their wings, attacking my head and face. I got spurred in the arms, chest and back as I ducked from their barrage attack.
After that, I was 100% done with messing around on a humane kill business. And of course by not doing a humane kill it wouldn't be clean either, so I knew I wouldn't be able to get photos. But regardless, I needed these birds gone, so I turned my husband, dad & brother loose on them. Told them to take them out however they wanted as long as they were dead. The three men thought this was an awesome idea, since they all hate my chickens, but specifically my roosters with a passion.
After locating them all, they were successful, but there was one rooster in particular that was very good at evading us, even though we shot at him he would keep running. Once we finally did take him out and I took all his feathers off I realized that we had all hit him when we were shooting him, he just had like... 9 lives. lol The other three roosters went down a lot easier.
However, interesting facts (to me anyway) was that when I tried to shoot the escape artist rooster several months ago, I thought I missed him, I did not. I did indeed hit him, and not only that but I hit him exactly where I was supposed to to take him out. I had just missed his internal organs by mere millimeters. When I finally opened him up, he had 5 bullet holes, (4, 9mm & 1, .22) plus the healed hole from my original 9mm several months back. Tough old bird was way too good at staying alive!!
After all of that, I ended up only getting one bird that was usable out of the 4, mainly because I was just so tired I couldn't finish. My hands were shaking and I was close to collapsing, ended up nicking the gall bladder on the last one I attempted which means I had to throw it away. Asked my brother to take care of all of the guts, feathers, carcasses etc. which he did, while I showered, then colapsed. Mom even texted me that she needed me to help her, with my kids, and I didn't even hear my phone. THAT showed me this morning just how utterly exhausted I was.
Saturday, April 16, 2016
As The Egg Turns
My husband says I need to share a story with you about the personalities my hens have developed. There are a few details necessary to describe the comical behaviors that have transpired.
Sometime during the winter months, I got sick of feeding the birds. I had just had a baby in April of 2015, & felt like I was running around with my hair on fire trying to get everything done for my children, let alone the birds. I asked for some help from my sister, who did help for a time but got bored of it, stopped feeding them & didn't tell me. The chickens went for about a week without food, and as most animals will do when they are being starved, they will try to escape their confinement. Mine succeeded.
They succeeded so well in fact, that they ripped the chicken wire up from the floor boards in specific areas & created new nesting areas for themselves between the wire & the exterior walls. So even though they escaped, they would return to these areas and lay their eggs behind the wire where humans and most animals couldn't get to them. I was actually quite impressed, after I got over the irritation of realizing they had ruined the coop and that I couldn't reach their eggs.
Over the last several months I have slowly re-trained them where I want them to lay. The birds & I have come to a compromise after several go rounds of them vandalizing the chicken coops. I won't lock them up, as long as they lay their eggs where I want them to. This compromise works well for us, the birds are able to go forage for themselves & I don't have to feed them on such a concrete schedule. In exchange for their freedoms, I have trained them to lay their eggs in 1 of 2 places, and of course there is always that 1 bird that must be contrary and still tries to lay her eggs where she wants and not where I would like. 1 out of 14 is not too bad though so I let her slide.
The places I have coached them into laying in are:
- An old water tank that no longer does it's intended job correctly. I have filled this tank approximately 1/2 full with hay and "seeded" the nests with fake eggs to guide the birds towards laying there.
- The tank is large enough for all of my hens to fit in side without touching while laying at the same time if they chose
- The walls of the tank are tall enough that our German shepherd cannot reach the eggs to hand them down to the yellow mutt.
- I've placed boards over the top of the tank except in key places to discourage scavengers such as raccoons, opossums, skunks & other chickens from raiding the nests.
- An old white plastic milk house sink, stuffed with hay about half-way up & fake eggs seeding the nest. This location has been placed inside of the second hen house with the door closed and the walls re-secured on the first hen house that they all destroyed so they had to find new spots to lay.
What I have actually found interestingly enough, is that I have 7 who prefer the white sink, and will lay all of their eggs at the same time. 4 of them will sit down facing each other so their butts are in the corners, and chitter chat at each other. It's almost like they are sitting there gossiping and talking about each other. "Oh my GOSH!!! Did you see how ruffled Stella was after Foghorn got done with her? Oh! He's such an animal! I wish Heidi would butcher him and get it over with! The way he uses those spurs on us while breeding is just INHUMANE!" bahaha.
Then you have the other half of the flock, who prefers to do their laying in private. And I mean as private as it gets. They all lay their eggs separately, under cover of darkness (under the boards) & no one talks to each other. They will wait in line to use the water tank, but no one jumps up early to watch, and if I happen to walk in during one of them laying, it offends her so much she will not lay her egg that day, or if she does, it isn't until LONG after I've gone. If someone starts pinching, they will fall back on the 55-gallon trash barrels I have throughout the barn. Their preferred ones are those with paper feed sacks in the bottom, but really it just comes down to whether they need the extra over-flow nests or not.
When I chose to purchase chickens, I had no idea there would be so many personalities and temperaments involved!! It's like a tiny soap opera down there in the barn! A friend of the family laughed and suggested I call the chicken drama "As the egg turns", and it probably isn't a bad idea, but I'm not sure anyone would actually get as much of a kick out of the chicken drama as I do.
Saturday, April 2, 2016
Duckies
I also was recently informed by A that it is "Time to eat the roosters Mommy". LOL!! I didn't realize he understood when I was butchering the chickens last year! My husband & I had been sure to keep him back & away during the killing stage, but I had let him play in his sand box during all the other phases so apparently it sunk in more than I realized, and as he is completely chill about the whole thing I'd say it doesn't bother him all that much.
When he told me it was time to butcher the roosters, I told him "OK we'll butcher them once Mommy catches them", not realizing just how serious he was about doing it right then and there in that moment... so he proceeded to chase my roosters all over the barn for the next 10 minutes. I told him he shouldn't chase them, because they could hurt him, but he listens about as well as any normal, active 2.5-year old, so it took a little bit to corral him and get him to stop chasing the roosters. I did end up catching 2/4 & stuck them in the kill cage (I pen them up overnight so I don't have to worry about having a full crop to work with), but then the weather changed overnight. It got cooler than I really wanted to deal with for butchering so I let them go again. Their days are most definitely numbered though because I have chicks from last year which are potentially being bred with their father...
Also, I've been asked by a reader to post photos of my unorthodox way of butchering, so although my husband is squeamish about the thought, I may have to enlist his help in taking photos, because once I begin butchering, I tend to get rather covered in blood and feathers. Not the sort of thing that you want to be picking up a camera all the time, and perhaps if my husband or someone else helps me take photos, I can get some better ones than if I were to do it myself.
Tuesday, August 12, 2014
The Lost Has Been Found!!
The guineas are most displeased, and Ms. Bunny didn't steal all the eggs, leaving about 5 so they would potentially still lay their eggs there, but the nest was kind of really gross. I went in to look at it and they had obviously been laying their eggs here for a good LONG time. You could SMELL the nest long before you saw it... and it makes me really wonder how in the world I ever missed it!! However, in my defense, they DID choose to lay their eggs underneath a large mulberry tree that drooped down to the ground and created a natural "cave" of sorts. I think it even ended up "protecting" them from most of the rain, which is kind of neat.
Ever since the summer warmth kicked in I stopped bothering to pen them up, so they've been "on their own" without me feeding them at all for probably close to 4-months.
We had 4 guineas to start with, thought we had at least 1 roo, but have not seen any keets out of them, so if we do have a roo, the hens are just too stupid to properly raise the chicks and keep walking away from them & they all die... OR we don't have a roo at all. Either way... I'm not very impressed with guineas. Thinking of butchering them out when I butcher out the roosters... but we'll see.
Tuesday, June 24, 2014
The goings on in our world over the last week
SURPRISE rex bunnies! |
Lacey |
Rusty |
Lightning |
Roger |
Roger being roger. Very cocky, very strutty |
Buff Orpington Rooster - also for sale if anyone is interested, although he will be a stew pot guest if no one is. |
One of the 4 red pyle old english roosters for sale |
Spazzy, being very photogenic |
Larry, being cocky. |
Ms. Bunny's rex had another surprise litter. 9 of them this time! |
The beeplas playing & scratching under the elderberry's |
Tuesday, June 17, 2014
Photos of das beeplas! :-D
One of the Light Brahma Hens |
SPAZZY!!! Bahaha he's the most "show-off", photogenic, gentle rooster I've ever met. :-D He even lets my son pull on his feathers and he doesn't squawk or try to get away. |
A light brahma hen & a jersey giant hen |
Silver Lace Wyandotte rooster. Thinking of naming him "lightning". |
They're getting more adventurous! Not quite comfortable enough with the outdoors to venture out of the barn, but they are getting closer! |
Light brahma hen |
Light brahma hen |
Stella, 1/2 pastel easter eggers |
Rodney, my jersey giant rooster |
Roger, 1/2 easter egger roosters |
Light brahma hen trying to figure out if this silver pan of water is a good thing or a bad thing... |
Roger is investigating the food pan |
2/2 pastel easter egger hens |
They just got let out of the coop... it was a giant wave of 7-week old chickens! LOL They were running so fast that some got trampled and went head over apple cart. |
The adventurous light brahma who actually leaves the barn |
The adventurous light brahma who actually leaves the barn. She's pecking around under an old truck. |
Roger being all pompous & strutting his stuff |
Lightning poking around being nosy |
All of the others following this point are Moms Isa Browns being nosy and poking around the yard for stuff to eat. :-)