Wednesday, July 20, 2011

This week on the farm.



This week has been busy here at our farm.  The Chickens are doing well and have switched from organic chick feed to organic growers feed with some supplemented scratch.  They are starting to get big and fat :)  


Gretel and Hansel



 Hansel and Gretel are now 11 weeks old and starting to really grow.  They love for us to come give them attention and often call for me and the boys to come out and play.  The boys like to get in their pen and let them crawl all over them.





The ducks now have full use of the pond and are growing big and strong.  We did lose one though but we still have 12.  They come right up to me and tonight they ate right out of my hand.


The garden is doing pretty good, we started eating lettuce and cherry tomatoes out of it this week.  The cold temps in June really didn't help it to grow.  We are making up for that this month with temps in the 85*-98* range.  I can't wait for more veggies to grow!





This week we also added something new to the farm, 20-2 day old chicks! 
They are Easter Eggers, New Hampshires, Plymouth Rock Barred and Buff Orphingtons.  They are all females and 2 of each will be kept for eggs and the rest for eating.  They have already left their home in the basement and are on the deck in the brooder coop.  They are so cute!


On a sad note.......this week John's bunny Jack died for no apparent reason.  We will probably  be replacing his bunny soon.

That sums up this week on the farm :)

Hansel & Gretel Join the Farm

L- John with Gretel R- Jamie with Hansel

On July 2, 2011 we again went to the Chicken Swap to find some turkeys and new chicks.  We ended up getting 2 Alpine Twin Buck and Doe Goats. They are so cute!  They loved to be held and petted and cry for me to come give them attention everyday.  The boys and I named them Hansel and Gretel.  Hansel is white with a couple of black spots and Gretel is black with a couple of white spots. 
Goat Pen
We were looking for lambs for Jamie but were not having any luck.  He really liked the goats so we got them instead.  We still want lambs and are on the look out for some decently priced ones.

June- 2011 Our first month in New Hampshire

Our adventure begins last December with hubby getting offered a promotion and being moved to the plant in Massachusetts.  Hubby is a huge hunter and wanted to live in New Hampshire where it is more hunter friendly.  We were looking for a home that would house not only us but our 20 year old grown sons who have autism.  We started house hunting immediately online and searched through tons of real estate sites.  It took us almost four months to find our home.  
Our New Home
Our new home is just over the Massachusetts border (second house inside NH). 
We arrived in New Hampshire the last week of May.  The first week was dealing with movers, new furniture deliveries and unpacking.
Garden and Goat and Sheep Pen being built.

From June 2nd to June 4th  we started turning our property into a farm.  We began digging and planting our garden and building our goat and sheep pen. We planted tomatoes, peppers, peas, green beans, lima beans, pinto beans, kidney beans, lettuce, carrots, onions, potatoes, sunflowers, corn, watermelon, pumpkins, cantaloupe, cucumbers, zucchini, crock neck squash, radishes, broccoli, cauliflower and both red and green cabbage.  


Jack
Spotty
On June 4th we went to Milford to the Chicken Swap and got the boys bunnies and our first set of chickens.  The boys got lionhead bunnies which they named Jack and Spotty.  They were suppose to be outside bunnies but the cool night temps brought them inside quickly and they took up residence in the boys rooms.


I also purchased 21 3 week old variety of chicks.  They were mostly Golden Comets but there were also 2 Buff Orphingtons, 2 Black Silkies and a Barred Plymouth Rock Hen.  We had 3 chicks die and ended up with 2 Roosters (1 Golden Comet and 1 Buff Orphington), 1 Buff Orphington Hen, 2 Silkies (not sure of sexes), and 13 Golden Comet Hens.  The chicks started out on the deck but soon made their way to the basement because of cool temps.  We housed them in a Brooder Coop at the beginning.



After 2 weeks they were ready to make their way outside to a big coop and pen.  Joe and I built the pen ourselves but bought the coop off of craigslist from a student who had built it in shop. This coop worked well but was a little small for our flock so we began to look for a larger coop.




While we were building the pen we were also having a water crisis on the property.  For some reason our well wasn't pumping water and the well company thought that our well had gone dry.  After a month long battle of trying to get the water problems fixed we now have two working wells but are $25,000 poorer.  (There goes our tractor money)

Blue Swede and Rouen Ducks



In the middle of the month of June, my husbands friend and co worker asked him if he would like some baby ducks for free.  We had an overgrown  pond on the property with no wildlife in it and my hubby loves ducks.  So of course, he says yes.  The ducks were Rouens and Blue Swedes.  They were about 6 week old when we got them.  There were 13 of them but we did lose one.  

New Large Chicken Coop


That next week was spent cutting down the overgrown vegetation around the pond and buying a larger chicken coop, in order to give the ducks the smaller coop.  (Someone should of told us that ducks don't like using coops. lol)  The chickens got a new home and we now have an extra coop that we will put to use soon.   



That ends our first month in New Hampshire.  We got tons of stuff done and had a lot of heartache over our water situation.  Bring on July.