Godless in the garden

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Godless in the garden

Welcome to gardeners, growers of veggies, fruits, flowers, and trees!  

Welcome  backyard hen enthusiasts, worm farmers, beekeepers & composters!

Location: Planet Earth
Members: 140
Latest Activity: 8 hours ago

Welcome to Eden!

If you like to dig in the dirt, plant & prune, grow food & flowers, or sit and watch as someone else does your landscaping, you'll find something here to discuss!

Selected topics, in no particular order:
Moon Phase Widget here. Moon phase topic here.
What's your gardening style?
Frugal gardening.
Backyard Chickens here. here. here. here.
Growing Fruits
Wild Parsnip - It can burn skin.
Why buy locally-grown plants?
Squirrels.
bees.
Cheap gardening.
Buy locally grown plants to prevent blight transmission here.
Grow lots of fruits in a small space, by backyard orchard culture.

Discussion Forum

Sweet alyssum to fight aphids

Started by Ruth Anthony-Gardner. Last reply by Sentient Biped on Tuesday. 2 Replies

Front yard gardening. Edible Estates.

Started by Sentient Biped. Last reply by Randall Smith May 16. 2 Replies

Tin can alley

Started by Randall Smith. Last reply by Randall Smith May 15. 3 Replies

Do Earthworms Reduce Slug Damage?

Started by Sentient Biped. Last reply by Randall Smith May 14. 4 Replies

Compost

Started by Joan Denoo. Last reply by Sentient Biped May 4. 2 Replies

Assisted Migration Adaptation Trial

Started by Joan Denoo. Last reply by Sentient Biped May 1. 1 Reply

May is Garden for Wildlife Month!

Started by Steph S.. Last reply by Sentient Biped May 1. 1 Reply

What's Growing in My Florida Garden

Started by Dominic Florio. Last reply by Idaho Spud Apr 22. 17 Replies

Brochures: Beneficial Insects

Started by Joan Denoo. Last reply by Steph S. Apr 21. 2 Replies

The Frugal Gardener

Started by Sentient Biped. Last reply by Sentient Biped Apr 16. 10 Replies

Sentient Biped's Garden Blog. Happy to add a different feed if there are suggestions.

Comment Wall

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Comment by Idaho Spud on December 7, 2012 at 12:25pm

Yes, we each have different things we enjoy enough to put in the work required, and what's work to one is pleasure to another.  Pulling weeds is a good example.  It's pleasurable to me, but most people hate it.

Chickens may not be too much work once a person learns how, but one thing that always looked like work that I would hate about raising chickens is dealing with the soft poop.  Rabbits have hard poop that falls through the wire mesh that us used as a floor for their cages and is easily scooped-up.  It would also not bother me to walk on it in the garden as much.

Talking about foul poop, I was always attracted to ducks and though I would like to own some.  My mind was changed instantly the day I visited a relative that owned some.  They let them run around in the back yard, and I had to watch every step I took when I went out there.  Soft poop was everywhere, even on the open back porch and trampoline. 

Comment by Chris Breman on December 7, 2012 at 11:52am

If it depends on your enjoyment I'll restrict myself to cats - but the chicken fortress looks wonderful!

Comment by Sentient Biped on December 7, 2012 at 11:17am

Spud,

Each to his own!
It's interesting, at the beekeeping class I went to a couple of weeks ago, the instructor said chickens are more work than honey bees.  I can't picture that.  They are not much work.  Maybe it depends on if you enjoy it!

Comment by Idaho Spud on December 7, 2012 at 10:03am

Also, I don't eat many eggs.

Comment by Idaho Spud on December 7, 2012 at 10:02am

Nice chicken fortress Sentient.  

I've thought of raising chickens, but It seems like too much work at my age.  What I want to raise is rabbits.  I enjoy the taste as much or more than chicken, and they don't seem to be as much work.  I also can start with quite a bit of knowledge because I watched my dad raise them.

Comment by Joan Denoo on December 7, 2012 at 1:18am

Yes! a Pulletzer Prize indeed. It is a wonderful, and whimsical creation and one that will not only keep the raccoons out, but the chickens happy and productive. It looks nice and roomy, with places for everything you need. Are the water and feed hanging? It looks as though they are on a rope. However, they look like they sit on the floor. This is just great!

Comment by Dallas the Phallus on December 6, 2012 at 10:40pm

Well for that you deserve a Pulletzer Prize.

Comment by Sentient Biped on December 6, 2012 at 9:46pm

Work is done for the winter on the chicken fortress.  There wasn't time to complete the upstairs windows, so they are covered with plastic to keep the rain and wind out.  Keeping it warm and cozy. Next Spring I'll complete the upstairs, do something about the windows (maybe find some recycled house windows), and if I'm ambitious, construct a balcony in the upstairs part with a chicken stairway leading to the second floor.

 

 

Most of the parts are recycled. The main structure was originally a children's playhouse.

Inside there is a roost (an old wooden curtain rod), screening to the feed storage area (recycled from a prior chicken house kit), private egg-laying booths (recycled from recycling bins they no longer use in my town), a light to stimulate winter laying (recycled from a room light), and the usual feeder and waterer.  To keep the chicken feed safe from rodents, a reused heavy plastic bin.  The greens are dandelions. The hens love them.  Dandelions are growing like crazy now, and pulling them is fun since they get fed to chickens.  The leaf greens result in darker yellow, tastier yolks.  I expect the dandelion growth will stop when we get a freeze.

The white hens are leghorns. The brown pullets are sex-linked, a brown egg laying breed. There was some squabble on adding the pullets, but the pecking order is now extablished and they are back to clucking and cooing.

In addition to the eggs, we get chicken manure for compost, and I get a way to cycle weeds, grape vines, and kitchen scraps, into healthy tasty food.

Comment by Joan Denoo on December 4, 2012 at 1:39pm

Alabama visit Phillip and Michael garden

I like the combinations of forms and textures and colors. It is a southern garden, but there are some basic ideas and northern species can be found. 

Comment by Chris Breman on December 3, 2012 at 1:17pm

Thanks Joan!  Found some new things in the links. I'm going to try a grow-light, but the South window is too difficult; all my windows are North-West.

 

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