Chick Chick!

My hens have been sitting on eggs. And like the good Chicken Farmer that I am, I had no idea how long they’ve been brooding. I just know they have. Two days ago, I went to feed and water them and found this little guy:

Adorable!

New chick

Here “it” is with the proud mama!

Mama and baby!

I have another hen that is sitting on 4 eggs and if she has any luck they’ll be more cuteness running around!

Happy Trails!

Pretty Birds

It’s been quite some time since I’ve shared about my hens. I don’t know why I haven’t, I just haven’t.

I guess it’s been slightly depressing. I lost my favorite rooster, Captain Coward while I was gone to Steamboat this fall, and three hens- probably all to coyotes. There were 9 chicks born this summer, and despite my best efforts I lost all but one of them as well. So I’m down to three hens, and two roosters. One of the hens is the surviving chick from this summer. My hens haven’t laid since August, and frankly I think it’s because they’ve been too stressed out with the flock decreasing like it has. Poor guys.

All that aside, I still think I have the coolest chickens around, and I am going to do my best to keep them healthy so they can have more chicks for me this coming summer! Last week, before all the snow hit the ground I got a chance to snap some photographs of them and I figure since we all ate a bird yesterday this is as good a time as any to share. Though we won’t be eating these!

One of my blue hens:

One of my roosters- Mr. Peabody. I have no idea why I decided to call him that. It just sounded like a good name for a rooster.

Another rooster, Sarg.

The lone surviving chick from this year’s hatchlings. She doesn’t have a name as of yet. Her color is what is referred to as Partridge.

Happy Friday!

Cowgirls Don’t Cry

This was a weekend to be remembered for many years to come. And not altogether in a good way.

Friday morning I discovered that my chicks had started hatching. My favorite black hen, had hatched her one egg- with a big fat little black chick. He was following her around and was sooooooooo adorable! A couple hours later I looked at my Blue Splash colored hen in the hen house, and there were two yellow (going to be white) chicks chirping away under her- with more eggs still cracking!

Shortly after that, the girls and I headed out to Rapid City, South Dakota for the Barrel Bash. When I say girls, I mean, Kelsey, along with our interns, Kara and Emily. The cowboy was going to come out the following day in the morning. Or at least that was the plan. I really didn’t like leaving when I had chicks hatching, and the dog known for massacring chicks around but what was I going to do?

Friday afternoon Zach called me to tell me that the veterinary interns that come into the country once a year were coming out to geld our colt herd- they’d do up to 15 horses (for free- good practice and all), so he wouldn’t get to leave until after that was over. And that Kelsey’s pony- her first horse of her own, was not doing well- that he thought she was colicky and hot, so he’d given her some banamine (the equine equivalent of Tylenol) and was going to observe her for a while.

We made our runs, and when I ran my gray mare, I managed to hit two barrels on her. I have never hit two barrels in one run on a horse before. And certainly I didn’t expect to hit any on her.

Here’s Nora’s Run:

Then I made my first run on Gump- which was one of his prettiest runs ever. I think we’re finally getting our timing down. Which means the speed will follow soon enough.

After that run I got a chance to talk to Zach and he said he was still on Speckles watch- that he thought she might be more comfortable but that he didn’t’ think she was going to make it. He’d dosed her twice with the Banamine. Sigh. She was at least 30 years old.

Saturday when we were on our way to the barrel race, we got the call from Zach- that Speckles would have to be put down. Cowgirls don’t cry until they lose a friend. And Kels lost her first pony- the one that gave her a love and joy for riding. It only made it worse that we weren’t there. When the vet came out on Saturday morning to geld our 15 studs, they did a belly tap and discovered she’d ruptured her intestine, so they had to put her down. Needless to say she wasn’t the only one in the truck crying when we got the news. Zach had to deal with her crying little brother, and two nieces here at home. The girls and Ty cleaned her up and told her goodbye before they put her down. They were also able to cut off her tail so Kels can have a piece of her. It’s always sad to lose a friend. I think I was better prepared for it because Zach and I had talked about it on Friday night, and I know that I am not that far away from the same thing happening with my old horse who lives with my parents in Texas.

Zach missed my Saturday runs, which were also pretty good- I managed to keep them all up on Nora, and Gump ran a tenth slower but I was still happy with his run. The girls made good runs on their horses too!

Nora’s clean run.

Zach arrived shortly after we finished our runs- at our friend’s place outside Rapid where we’d been keeping our horses. I am always relieved to see him. I don’t know why. I guess it’s because he’s comforting!

Saturday evening we picked up a student who’s here for the next month for horsemanship classes. She flew in to the Rapid Airport, so while the kids swam at the Hotel, we ran out to the airport to get her. By the time we got back, all three passengers were at the end of their energy levels for the day.

Sunday arrived all too soon, and before we knew it we were headed out to the arena to make our last runs of the weekend. The girls made great runs, and both Kelsey and Kara came out smiling. I managed to hit barrel #2 on my mare, again. Itwasallmyfault!

Then came my run on Gump. We’d been really gelling all weekend, and I wanted so bad to go out there and be about an 18.8 (that would have put me close to winning the 4D on him.)

Well I did manage to win $108 check for my effort, and a trip to the ER on that run!

Yes that is me coming off of him at the end of that run. And apparently, Cowgirls don’t cry until the EMTs from the Rapid City Regional Hospital put you on a stretcher and lock you down in a neck brace and strap you to that rock hard, most uncomfortable board, known as a stretcher.

I guess I have some ‘splainin’ to do!

When I came off, I really wasn’t planning to do so. I thought I was gonna get my horse stopped but we just ran out of real-estate. He zigged, I zagged and when that happened, I flew into the portable panel that was there to keep us from the cement wall. Had the wall be there, I’d probably still be in Rapid at the Hospital. Zach was standing back by the warm up pen before my run, telling me how good my horse looked and to go have fun, and when he saw me get loose, he was jumping over the fence, so he missed the whole wreck. I managed to get up to my hands and knees, but the wind was knocked out of me so bad that I couldn’t really tell what hurt. I remember looking at my horse thinking, I have to help him not be scared here, because he was looking at me like, “what are you doin’ down there, Jenn?” but I couldn’t muster the energy.

Some woman comes over and is like, what hurts honey? Another woman is like, she hit her head on the panel. And I was cognizant enough to tell them that it wasn’t my head that hurt. that it was my neck and back. They immediately made me lay down straight, and made me wiggle my toes. Two of the women there were an EMT and a Nurse. They were both helpful. They asked my name, how old I was, what day of the week it was, what date it was, etc.

I don’t know who took my horse, but I remember asking about him (SEVERAL TIMES). I wanted to make sure someone took his boots off him and unsaddled him. Zach said that the girls had taken him. Someone asked if I had any family around and someone mentioned that my husband was right there (someday he’ll be my husband according to society). Zach was holding my left hand, the EMT was holding my right hand, and someone managed to find some washcloths for my forehead and my neck. I remember hearing the announcer have someone call for the ambulance. I remember asking Zach if we could just drive home and see Colette, his sister, who is my Doctor, and he said, no honey, you better stay here. And then either the Nurse or the EMT tell me, they’re calling the ambulance, I don’t have to go with them if I don’t want to, but they will be better able to check me out. I recall being asked if I had ever broken a bone, which I haven’t, and they said that I would know if something was broken. I was pretty sure nothing was.

I vaguely remember them saying, well she’s finally slowed her breathing and she’s not sweating as much, and I recall seeing someone fanning me with my cowboy hat. Then the EMTs showed up and I started crying. I wasn’t crying until then, but I really didn’t want to go to the hospital. So I kinda lost it. Zach just said to be quiet and stay calm that I was fine. To keep trying to relax, that it was better to be checked out and safe than sorry later. That I could have been holding on by a thread. They put a neck brace on me, did the same things/tests that the previous EMT had done, felt my legs, my ribs, my arms to check for fractures and then put me on a stretcher. That is the most uncomfortable thing I have ever been on. Then I recall them saying that I would feel like I was floating as they picked me up and put me on the bed. I remember the EMT saying, you weren’t crying when we got here, why are you crying now, and telling him that I didn’t want to go to the hospital.

The announcer said that in case anyone was wondering I was conscious and was talking. And then I got into a very cold ambulance, which felt great. Some guy named Jim introduced himself to me and wanted to give me an IV to speed things up at the hospital. I couldn’t decline fast enough. Zach rode in the front of the ambulance with me over to the hospital. Jim and I had a nice conversation about falling off horses (he had one flip over backwards with him and broke his pelvis in 4 places). He took my vitals, again (they have this cool thing that tells them how oxygenated my blood is, simply by putting it on my finger- showed me the machine- pretty neat) and felt through my ribs, my legs, my arms to again check to make sure nothing was broken. Asked a million medical questions. Ok Maybe not a million, but I really didn’t’ want to be there in the first place.

Then we arrived at the hospital. By this time, I realize I don’t’ have my insurance card with me and that I’m starving. I had only had breakfast, and then a snack size bag of peanut M&Ms before I ran Gump. I really hate running on a full stomach. I think it was probably close to 3pm when I arrived at the hospital.

They checked me in, asked Zach a bunch of questions, took my vitals again, and then had me wait for the doctor. It was very irritating being in that neck brace because I couldn’t move my head, and so half the people that were helping me I couldn’t see.

When the doctor arrived he checked me over he just said they’d run me into the xray room.

A few moments later the xray techs showed up. I don’t recall both their names, but one of them was named Jennifer. So she can’t be bad, right. They told Zach they’d be about 20 minutes, and I remember telling them to please hurry because I was starving! They did about 10 xrays- down the lateral view and from the top. As note to self, don’t wear sequined shirts or blingy belts if you have to be in a hospital. B/c you practically have to get undressed for xrays. They were very nice and i never felt like they didn’t care about my dignity. That’s not my point. I just found it humorous!

About 15 minutes after I get out of Xray, the nurse comes back and says that I can’t eat until the doctor looks at my xrays. Zach says, well Jenn they don’t want you to eat in case they need to operate. FREAKING OUT! He says, but the good news is, that portable panels have some give, so I bet nothing’s broken. However if you’d hit the cement wall, we might be in a different situation. The doctor comes back and says the xrays look good, that I’m just bruised up and that he’s going to prescribe a muscle relaxer and to take 1000mg of Tylenol alternating with 600-800 mg of Motrin every 6 hours and that I’ll be sore for a while. He said a nurse would be in to release me.

In the meantime, while all this was happening, Zach had managed to call our friends with whom we’d kept our horses, and they’d dropped of a car for us, and picked up the kids and driven the horses back to their house. They fed the kids lunch for us, and were holding down the fort while we were being released and filling a prescription for Vallium, which I might add, is great stuff!

The sad part of this is that I had planned to take all my Texas girls to Mt. Rushmore and Crazy Horse the next day, and knew that wasn’t going to happen, so we loaded up early. The hotel manager gave us $50 off our room for the night that we weren’t going to stay in, which was very generous of her.

Monday I awoke to find a bunch of dead baby chicks, and both my mama hens gone. I still don’t know where they are. I was sore, hobbling around outside, looking for chicks, and calling for the mamas. I managed to find 6 chicks, 5 of which are still alive, and doing well. They’re living in my kitchen. The mamas, well, they’re nowhere to be found.

At least since bad things happen in threes, I should be safe for a while.

I hope that everyone else had a weekend that wasn’t quite as adventurous as ours!

Chick Hatching

Well I’m back, and I had the most amazing time. It was more wonderful than I thought it would be. My horse got better, I got more confidence and to be really truthful, it was an honor and a privilege to ride with such a great horseman. I’m more determined than ever to make some Bridle Horses in my lifetime, beginning with Gump. If you don’t know what a Bridle Horse is, stay tuned. We’ll go over it in great detail in the coming days. There’s lots of pictures from the clinic and on the last day, Buck asked me to help him demonstrate the last drill we’d be doing in the clinic. Needless to say, I was honored. In my own opinion, I was riding one of the nicer horses in the class- next to Buck’s horses of course. They are phenomenal.

In the meantime, the 4-H Farmer Dee Dee, wrote another post for us, this time about chicken hatching! If you’ll remember from a few weeks back she wrote about her ewe project with her sheep, Savannah Mae.
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Hey all,

Jenn, thanks for letting me guest blog post again. This time I’m going to talk about our chick incubation experience. The eggs are from the coop at the farm. They are all Americauna crosses because the one and only rooster in the coop is an Americauna.

We set the eggs in the incubator March 7th. The chicks stay there and develop from little minuscule dots to full grown chicks! The humidity and temperature stay perfect the entire time. The humidity stays at about 40% the first 18 days then on “lock-down” the last 18 days the humidity goes to around 70%. The last 3 days they are getting ready to come out of the eggs and so you need to increase so they don’t get stuck coming out. On day 20 it started! Since day 20 which was Friday, we have had 13 healthy chicks hatch!

When you put them into the brooder which is the housing for them until they can go out into the coop… the temperature needs to stay at around 95 degrees then you decrease it 5 degrees every week to get them to the point of room temperature and then they are ready to go outside when all their feathers are developed which is about 8 weeks.

I have a Youtube video up of one of the chicks hatching if you want to check that out. The link is: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poS5gEL-aHg

Thanks again for letting me guest blog post. Hope your weekend went as planned!

Dee Dee

Twitter.com/4hfarmer.

The Moochers

As evidenced here, there is wildlife other than the chickens, dogs, horses, cats and cows (antelope and deer too!)  that run around this place.  And lately, the chickens have had to share their space with some other pretty birds, Chinese Ring-necked Pheasants.

I’ve actually managed to catch a few of them in the act of eating and hanging out, but being wild birds, the slightest sound sends them flying off with their usual flutter,pfffttt, pfffftt, pfffffttt, flutter sound they make.  There have been six of them total hanging around the place. The chickens don’t seem to mind them. In fact, I can hear the conversation now:

Captain Coward the Rooster:  Dude, you’ve got some crazy colors there. I bet the ladies dig y’all.

Male Pheasant one: sure, but look, those dudes, they look just like me?  At least you birds are different colors.

Captain Coward: Dude. I hadn’t thought of that.

Here are some photos of the pretty birds.

Moochers

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Moochers

Moochers
I was peeking around the corner of the house when I snapped this one, so I apologize for the blurriness.

Moochers

Moochers

I really don’t mind them mooching, because as Captain Coward said, they really are pretty birds.

Blizzard Photos!

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Chief Swiftbird's former residence. It is called the Garage, here.

and More!

There’s some chicken photos thrown in just for fun. I wanted everyone to see the egg I found a couple days ago, (and I got another one yesterday! that makes 5 egss total. The first three were ruined b/c they laid them during the blizzard when their house was snowed in), and just how big Captain Coward, the rooster is getting! He’s really pretty! And speaking of the chickens, while I wrote this post this morning, I cooked myself 2 of the eggs I’ve gotten in the last couple days. They made a yummy, breakfast. Fresh eggs are the best. If you’ve never gotten to try one, I highly recommend it, though the eggs are made better by the fact that the hens get to free roam.

There’s snow, snow everywhere! There’s photos of the dogs, specifically my Papillon, Higgins, and MJ, the corgi/border collie. There’s photos of the snow drifts by the windbreak pen. And you’ll get to meet Orange-y, the cat that likes to help. Most of what you’ll see is drifts, the front of our house, hay stacks, the driveway to Zach’s brother’s house and our road just 1/3 mile west of our house. The entire curve is covered with snow. And I apologize for the camera lens being dirty. I had no idea that it had water spots on it, but i guess that is what one gets when they try to take photos during a blizzard, like I did. The first five photos were taken during the storm. I’m crazy. I know. I promise to try to get back to blogging about Vegas, and back into the normal blogging mode. Enjoy the pics!

[flickrset id="72157622976307979" thumbnail="square" overlay="true" size="medium"]

Love,

Me

Macro Monday

Almost everything in life is better late than never if you ask me.  I wanted to have these photos up first thing this morning, but my days haven’t been going like planned since I’ve been on &*$%#^@ Prednisone.  I got the big lense for the camera back this weekend, so I wanted to use the macro setting on it and see if I could get some better photos of my feathered friends, also known as my Giant Cochin Hens. I’m sure y’all are just dying to see more photos of my chickens, right?

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The Day Captain Coward Found His Voice

Captain Coward

Captain Coward

Recall the chicken massacre of earlier this year.  And the poor scaredy-cat rooster that wouldn’t leave the hen house for several weeks after that mishap? I could swear I blogged about him, but for the life of me, I can’t find it in my archives.

Well, he woke Zach up at 5:30 am, on Saturday morning, pronouncing to the world that it was dawn.

This chicken venture has been so much fun, though I’m not sure yet how I’m going to keep them out of my flower beds next year, unless I fence them in and they don’t want to be fenced in. Besides that, I need them to eat all the obnoxious grasshoppers that killed my garden this past summer.

I still haven’t heard him crow, but I’m sure y’all will hear all about it when I do.  And since I took some photos of them the other day, I suppose I should share:


Crow for me-

Just Call Me Chicken

So technically I’m not a chicken, unless it comes, of course, to throwing my leg over a colt for the first time. Though I intend to remedy that this winter. No, I’m talking about the kind of chickens that go, cluck-cluck-cluck and lay a golden egg. Or in my case, a brown egg! Don’t everyone go get so excited yet- they’ve not started laying eggs, but they are getting really pretty and fat and I adore their furry feet. I got the chance a couple days ago to snap some new photos and I promised an update on them so here’s some photos of my feather footed friends.

This is Big Bertha, the black pullet, and then the blue pullet next to her doesn’t have a name because there is another one that looks just like her and I haven’t tried to find a difference in them yet.

Here is a buff pullet and a blue splash pullet. They both survived the massacre.


One of my blue roosters. Isn’t he gorgeous?

Doing what chickens do best!

Here’s a close up of one of the three that survived the masacre- I call her Splash. I’m soooo original!

One of my gorgeous silver roosters that I purchased. He is one of my favorite birds!

This is Capt. Coward, one of the other birds to have survived the massacre. I have three roosters and two of them must go. So I hope to find them good homes!


An up close of Bertha. I believe she is gorgeous!

I have a lot of pictures of these crazy birds, so I reckon, you’ll see them again. I just didn’t want to bore anyone too badly at one time!

A Massacre, a Stroke and Death

So far this has NOT been a super week.

Monday my little dog killed all but three of my beautiful chicks. I was devastated. Everyone has been so supportive of my *chicken farming* venture, as Zach likes to call it. My dad, Bud and Zach worked very hard to build them a cool hen house. I am going to get some more chickens, but I’m looking at getting some that are 3 months old as opposed to getting actual chicks. I think it might be easier, and we’re in the heat of the best part of the year as far as riding goes. We’ll see. I found some in Florida, but it’s going to cost a small fortune for me to have them shipped. And I’ll be without any white ones, or the partridge color that I was growing so fond of. My poor birds! The good news in all of this is, that I know which dog to watch for when it comes to my chickens- and I have three wiser chickens. I think I need to get a mean rooster with big spurs on his feet to beat up my little dog so he’ll learn to leave the chickens alone. They had been doing so well and had been getting so big. They were fat and had the prettiest feathered feet! It only took the dog 30 minutes to kill 20 birds. Needless to say he’s not been in my good graces.

Some time this weekend my dad’s oldest brother, my Uncle Raub, had a stroke. Raub is 20 years older than my dad, the baby of the family of 8 biological kids; the ninth was adopted. He and his wife Mary live in the Texas Hill Country along with my dad’s third oldest brother Larry. Larry was found dead in his home yesterday. I’ll be heading to Manhattan, Kansas at some point in the coming week to attend a funeral. In case anyone is wondering, I’m freakin’ tired of funerals. People can stop dying at any time now!

I do have happy news and fun video to post too, but I needed to get all this ickiness out of my system first.

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