Having become increasingly frustrated with my hen's ability to spoil their drinking water fast, I did a bit of online research on alternatives to the dish based drinker for chickens.
I realised with a few simple materials it is possible to make a spoil-proof solution at home. I thought I would share with you what I came up with...
I drilled a hole in an ordinary bucket and using silicone (lots!) and a hose connector, joined a bit of hosepipe to the hole. On the other end I attached with a jubilee clip a nipple drinker that i bought cheaply from eBay. The whole thing is then hung from a hook and held in place by duct tape!
I put my new contraption (I will admit it looks slightly Heath-Robinson) up in the coop just now, and after a small amount of encouragement with well placed meal worms, my ladies are drinking enthusiastically!
Where the expression "bird brain" comes from, I don't know, all I can say is it's not from the domesticated chicken!!
Monday, 19 November 2012
Saturday, 10 November 2012
Happy hens
I know I set out to write about my allotment, but I haven't got up there yet, and the hens are providing a lot of subject matter!
I read the other day about chickens enjoying fallen leaves, so this morning collected a few boxes full and dumped them in a heap in the chicken run. What happy hens now, I'll try to attach a video of them or at least a photo. A pile of leaves definitely appeals to all the basic foraging instincts of the chicken: in the wild they are forest dwelling birds, scratching the earth for worms and small insects.
I read the other day about chickens enjoying fallen leaves, so this morning collected a few boxes full and dumped them in a heap in the chicken run. What happy hens now, I'll try to attach a video of them or at least a photo. A pile of leaves definitely appeals to all the basic foraging instincts of the chicken: in the wild they are forest dwelling birds, scratching the earth for worms and small insects.
Friday, 9 November 2012
Escaping chicken!
We have three lovely ordinary brown hens, a year old now and laying eggs with alarming regularity! They have very distinct characters, Mrs Weasley is a quietly confident hen - always trying to steal food from our black Labrador! Ginny (Weasley) is happy in the bushes looking for slugs, and Bingo is the bold and adventurous one!
The three ladies live in a converted play house with a run around it, and are allowed out into the garden every day for a bit of foraging and occasional frog eating (!). Bingo has obviously decided that I don't let her out early enough as twice now she has managed to escape - who said chickens were stupid?? The fence around their run is quite high and deliberately unstable, but Bingo has discovered that if she jumps up onto the flap over the coop entrance, she is then able to fly out. This morning I looked out of the window to find Mrs Weasley and Ginny looking quite anxious at the front of the run, wandering back and forth - something was obviously up..... I then saw cheeky Bingo wandering around the garden, picking up windfall apples!!
Job for weekend - Bingo proof the run!!
The three ladies live in a converted play house with a run around it, and are allowed out into the garden every day for a bit of foraging and occasional frog eating (!). Bingo has obviously decided that I don't let her out early enough as twice now she has managed to escape - who said chickens were stupid?? The fence around their run is quite high and deliberately unstable, but Bingo has discovered that if she jumps up onto the flap over the coop entrance, she is then able to fly out. This morning I looked out of the window to find Mrs Weasley and Ginny looking quite anxious at the front of the run, wandering back and forth - something was obviously up..... I then saw cheeky Bingo wandering around the garden, picking up windfall apples!!
Job for weekend - Bingo proof the run!!
Thursday, 8 November 2012
First post
Welcome to my first post on my blog!
After a really poor growing year on my allotment, I thought I might re-vamp my love for it by starting a blog on my progress whilst also sharing experiences with keeping a few chickens (and other pets) and being a busy mum of three girls.
So - a little more about me as a start...
At home we have three chickens, three guinea pigs, a dog, a cat, a gerbil, three daughters (lots of threes I realise now!) and an allotment a few miles away. I work during the school day, so care of all of the above is fitted into my spare time....
I have had my allotment for 4 years now, and this year with the dry spring then wet and cold summer has provided the worst harvest of all crops so far, so I'm feeling a little disheartened. I hope that by blogging about my allotmenting I will be re-heartened (?!)....fingers crossed!!
After a really poor growing year on my allotment, I thought I might re-vamp my love for it by starting a blog on my progress whilst also sharing experiences with keeping a few chickens (and other pets) and being a busy mum of three girls.
So - a little more about me as a start...
At home we have three chickens, three guinea pigs, a dog, a cat, a gerbil, three daughters (lots of threes I realise now!) and an allotment a few miles away. I work during the school day, so care of all of the above is fitted into my spare time....
I have had my allotment for 4 years now, and this year with the dry spring then wet and cold summer has provided the worst harvest of all crops so far, so I'm feeling a little disheartened. I hope that by blogging about my allotmenting I will be re-heartened (?!)....fingers crossed!!
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