Cooking when the lights go out

Around here we lose power 6-10 times each winter due to trees falling on power lines. Not a big deal with our generator, but I wanted an option for cooking without electricity.

Enter the new firepit.

When you combine this with a dutch oven, you get a (relatively) easy way to prep full meals over an outdoor fire. Takes much more attention and tending, but perhaps that makes the meal taste better!

The cold frames you see in the background are now supplying us with our salad greens, and should do so for several more months.


Why are my chickens on strike?

This had us puzzled until we realized it was October and they were beginning their molt. But our egg production was off more than our neighbors. We went from 9 a day to 1.

Three weeks later I found a clutch of eggs in their own homegrown nest under some blackberries in the pasture. It had 21 eggs in it!

Time to make improvements to their set of six nest boxes, as they clearly don’t like them…


What will you eat this winter?

We’ll be eating fresh salad and spinach, thanks to a few new cold frames.

My sales pitch to my wife for a greenhouse was unsuccessful (too much money), so I went the less expensive route of additional cold frames. By surrounding these three cold frames with bags of hay, and blankets during the odd snow storm, we should be able to eat salad straight through the winter.

I hope.   🙂


The dangers of day ranging

Wow. We’ve lost three chickens to birds of prey in the last two weeks. Two taken by owls – one I chased around our field at 1AM with a flashlight – and a third one by a Peregrine falcon that inadvertently trapped himself in our chicken tractor.

He got into the tractor, killed a chicken, and was eating it when the door to the coop got blocked. I was furious when I found him (and my dead chicken), but he’s on the protected list, so I had to let him go. Very, very frustrating.

Not sure what we’re going to do about all these birds of prey. They sure don’t make day-ranging chickens very straightforward.


Day-Ranging chicken coop :: version 2.0

Just as our chicken tractors went through a few improvement versions, our day-ranging coops are as well. Introducing the new and improved version 2.0 of the Day Ranger.

Still protected by the electronet fencing, this one abandoned the use of political signs as walls and roof for the use of salvage lumber. The political sign coop works well, but it needs to be a backyard that does not have high winds.

In addition to going with heavier lumber to resist the wind, the version 2.0 Day Ranger features six nest boxes and 20′ of roost space, in anticipation of starting a newer, larger flock this winter.

A few more photos to see the additional details:


Potato towers are a lot of hype

…but don’t deliver as promised. The official tally is in and our trenches blew away the potato towers for production quantity, and ease of use. 214 pounds of eating potato from 20 pounds of seed potato! A few photos from our whole family harvest days (the middle photo just makes me happy):


Potato harvest

So far in the contest between potato towers and a normal potato setup in the ground (using trenches and hilling), the in-the-ground solution is the clear winner. We harvested just 10% of our in-the-ground potatoes today and got this.

Holy smokes. That is A LOT of potatoes and we’ve still got three more trenches to go that are twice as long as this one!


Harvest time makes me happy

…particularly for items like garlic and potatoes.

We’ve now got a year’s worth of garlic in cold storage.


Alternative shoe :: Five Fingers review

The Five Fingers alt-shoe by Vibram are like motorcycles. I like motorcycles.

I used to ride daily and experience the same responses from people when walking around in motorcycle gear that I do now walking around with these weird “shoes” on my feet. So here’s the Top 5 ways Five Fingers are like motorcycles:

  1. Five Fingers are riskier than a normal shoe, but still serve same purpose to get you from point A to point B. You have to watch where you step, just like on a motorcycle you have to pay 30% more attention to your surroundings.
  2. Five Fingers are galvanizing; people self-identify to me when I’m wearing these things: “I have some at home!” “I’ve been reading about those!” Same thing for bikes. Fellow riders (and those who just geek out for such things) will go out of their way to self-identify and start conversations about motorcycles.
  3. Five Fingers elicit excited responses from others. Those statements above really do always seem to end in exclamation points. Same for bikes.
  4. Five Fingers draw extra attention, mostly positive, whether you want it or not. Just as “What kind of bike is that?” is a common inquiry at roadstops, the question “What kind of shoe is that?” is a frequent inquiry from complete strangers.
  5. Five Fingers make some people mad. Really. Some people have illogical, belligerent reactions to you walking by wearing these things. It is like you are personally attacking their idea of what a shoe can and should be. Why are these people so passionate about footwear? Weird. But you get the same thing with motorcycles, especially when debating the merits of cruisers versus bullet bikes.

I don’t actually wear these to town much as I’m almost always wearing my clipless pedal bicycle shoes that look fairly normal. But I wear Five Fingers daily outside at home for food production chores. Check out the myriad of blogs and fan sites to learn about their benefits.

Only three hassles with these shoes:

  1. You simply can’t quickly slip these on/off for quick trips in/out of your home. Even after months of practice, I still have to bend over to shove my useless pinky toe in its slot.
  2. Your feet get wet no matter what, which is a hassle considering the annual rainfall where I live. I’ve got the Flow model with insulation for winter work outside in the garden, food forest, and hiking, but you still end up with wet feet.
  3. The tan lines on your feet look downright goofy when wearing normal thong sandals showing off your sparkly white toes. See attached photo taken by my daughter; she thinks it is hilarious.

Highly recommended if you find yourself with consistent back pain or other problems that better posture might remedy.


From chicken tractor to day-ranging

We’re moving.

Not from our small town, but from our current Joel Salatin inspired chicken tractor setup to an Andy Lee style day-ranging setup.

Why?

  • Transition most daily chores to weekly/monthly/quarterly.
  • Enable remaining daily chore (egg collection) to be done by kids.
  • Increase health of the birds. Hoping that more space means less pecking each other.

How?

  • Built a smaller coop meant to solely be a place to lay eggs and roost for the night. Protection from elements only, not predators. Self-imposed limit on the coop was it had to be made entirely from found materials. We used old political campaign signs as the wall/wings and roof, IKEA bed slats as framing lumber, etc. Local woodworker did the design work and let use use his awesome workshop.
  • Added 1/4 acre of electronet fencing to protect from daily coyote visits and occasional raccoons. That’s enough pasture to not need to move the coop and fencing but once every 1-3 months, depending on the season.
  • Added rebar posts with pinwheels to distract the local birds of prey. We get daily fly-bys from eagles, osprey, hawks…and owls each evening. They are beautiful, but I like to eat eggs.
  • Added a range feeder that holds 50# of feed while keeping it dry. My daughter is wearing the top part as a hat in the nearby photo.
  • Made my own 7-day waterer from an extra 5 gallon bucket and $1 chicken nipples (can’t believe I just wrote that) from Farmtek.

Here are some photos…