Countdown to the last frost is upon us!

Good Afternoon! And Happy Friday! 

It’s been a very busy but exciting week here at Archie’s Acres! The last frost is upon us! And the 100+ tomato and pepper plants couldn’t be more excited. No wait, scratch that, Hanna and I couldn’t be more excited to get them out of our sun porch! They’re about 6 inches tall and clearly looking for more space to grow. And of course we’re all for that.  We’re hoping for only one more week of a frost threat out here. Oh please…

In preparation for the big move, we’ve begun building a 150′ by 35′ deer/rabbit fence around our entire garden. It’s a lot of work, and really kills your hands, but it’s worth it. The deer, rabbits and raccoons are ferocious eaters out here!

Wrapping the entire area in 30lb test fishing line and 2 feet tall chicken wire.
Spring is the season for Baby Animals.
…and we have a couple around here.

Our baby chickens are growing and flourishing. They’re learning the rules of being a chicken. And believe it or not, there is a protocol and of course a pecking order. The 20+ babies that we got from the hatchery in Iowa (Hoover’s Hatchery: https://www.hoovershatchery.com/) are now about 2 months old and are living outside in a rabbit hutch that we converted to a chicken coop. They’re still unable to join the adults because they’re not even close in size so they won’t stand a chance with the adults, who tend to be bullies.

The 7 blue egg laying chicks that we hatched in the incubator earlier this month are happily in their brooder in the garage, growing and socializing and learning chicken things. They have about 2 more weeks until they have all of their feathers and can handle the outside temp changes. But we’ll most likely keep them in the brooder for another month since there is only 7 of them, and they won’t outgrow their current space as quickly.

Baby Quail!

We have also hatched 7 baby quail in the last week. They are Coturnix quail, which is a breed of Japanese quail; they are the easiest quail breed to start with, they are cold hardy, mild-mannered and prefer to hang out on the ground which makes egg collection easier. We will sell their eggs at farmers markets this summer.

Baby quail. 🙂

At first we had only hatched 1 quail, who was alone for over a day, he/she was very lonely, so a new hatchling made him/her very happy. He/she was very concerned with the well-being of the new baby. It was very sweet to watch. Since then we’ve hatched 5 more. They are the tiniest creatures. And their growth rate is impressive. In just 2 weeks they have developed at a rate that would take a chicken over a month to reach. These quail will reach full maturity at around 2 months old, while a chicken will take 5-6 months.

One of our baby quail needed braces for his splayed legs.
Baby Lamb!

Annnnnd we now have a baby lamb! Her name is Tilly. She lives in our house currently, as newborns are prone to hypothermia. She is 1 week old today and follows us around like a puppy. We got her from our friend Mike, who is a hog/sheep farmer nearby (he was also our realtor). Tilly was a triplet and her mom was unable to make enough milk for all 3 babies, so she needed to be bottle-fed, and we volunteered. At first it was a tough process, she didn’t take to bottle feeding very well. But 2 days later, she was a maniac at feeding time. She hits the bottle like a tiny bass and inhales her food. She’s growing and getting stronger every day. She will be in charge of landscaping our 2+ acre fenced in pasture. It’ll be nice to not have to make the time to mow that.

Busy busy busy…

All of these baby plants and animals have kept us very busy. Please follow us on Instagram.  @ArchiesAcres

I try to post at least once a day. And as Spring really kicks in, we’ll have more of a focus on our organic vegetables and herbs. 🙂

Thanks for reading!

Farmlife is a busy life!

Yes yes, I realize that it’s been forever since we’ve posted an update. So I’ll do a top 10 list of things that we’ve done since I last checked in.

TOP 10 THINGS WE’VE DONE ON THE FARM…

    1. Those blue egg layer Cream Crested Legbar and Whiting True Blue eggs finally hatched! We have 7 beautiful new chicken babies! I’ve been actively humanizing them by relentlessly picking them up, so they’re a friendly little crew.
    2. Our windbreak has been massively added to on the West and North sides of the farm by planting 25 arborvitae trees, 10 plum bushes, 10 serviceberry bushes and 10 nannyberry bushes. They’re all only about 2 feet tall, but seem to be doing well. Now we just have to wait 5 years…
    3. We tilled our entire 150′ by 35′ garden. Since we don’t own a tiller yet, so we borrowed our neighbors. Geez, tilling is hard work!
    4. We planted over 150 potatoes. Many many radishes, onions, peas, carrots and Brussels sprouts seeds went in the ground too….
    5. We re-potted over 150 tomato, pepper, cauliflower, flower and broccoli seedlings. Some of the rarer tomato and peppers seedlings will be sold at the Rockford Green City Farmer’s Market this summer for the first few markets anyway. We’ll be there every 2nd and 4th Friday until the end of September.
    Here’s the link to find out more about the market:

http://www.rockfordcitymarket.com/

    6. We built a deer and rabbit fence around the entire garden. The rabbit and deer population is impressive out here. When we come home in the evening, there are always at least 8 baby rabbits running across the driveway. And we learned last year that they are ferocious eaters!
    7. We weeded, re-roped and trimmed back our Centennial and Chinook hops plants to get them ready for Spring.  This is the 2nd year for these hops so we should get an even better crop this summer! Last year we only got enough to do 2 batches of beer. So this year we’re hoping for at least 4 brewing sessions with our own hops.
    8. We just started hatching quail eggs! Last night, in fact. We have 20+ cortunix quail eggs in our incubator. So far 3 have hatched. They are so cute! And surprisingly loud. We plan to sell quail eggs this summer. Quail develop surprisingly fast, they’ll be fully grown and laying in only 2 months!
Baby quail are so cute and tiny!
    9. We have moved all of our Iowa hatchery chicks out to a pen across from the chicken coop to get them acclimated to life outside. They’re all over 7 weeks now so they have all of their feathers and can survive the elements. Happy to report that all are doing well!
The teenagers are loving life outside.
    10. We have finalized our farmer’s market paperwork with the Rockford Farmer’s Market. We’ve bought all of the licenses that Illinois requires for every single thing they can think of. And it’s a lot. We have an egg license, I have my ServSafe food handling certification, a food handling permit and our individual licenses to sell in each county where we plan to sell. Plus our LLC insurance, FEIN and sales tax ID requirements are all squared away. We have all the required packaging and labeling materials to sell in Illinois, it was tedious and over-the-top, but that’s finally done. Phew.
    Life is good here at Archie’s Acres. Spring has the trees and flowers blooming, the grass is green and the woods are coming back to life! It’s so fun to watch nature do its thing every spring.

For daily picture updates about Archie’s Acres, follow us on Instagram! @archiesacres

https://www.instagram.com/archiesacres/

 

A beautiful Spring day at Archie’s Acres.

A busy weekend of baby chickens!

Hatching eggs is a beautiful experience. 

I previously wrote about our little breeding program to expand our chicken egg color palette, well on Friday another important step was taken, we successfully hatched 3 bright blue egg layers. The hatching rate wasn’t great. Only 3 out of 9 eggs hatched. Usually 60% can be expected. Ugh. It appears that a few of the eggs we received from the breeder in FL weren’t fertilized, which is really annoying considering the cost, but at least we got 3. And they’re sooo cute!

Baby blue egg layers.

Blue Egg Layers

2 of these chicks are Cream Crested Legbars and the other is a Whiting True Blue. The Cream Crested Legbars are a purebred, rare breed of blue egg layer. While the Whiting True Blue was bred by Dr. Tom Whiting, a poultry geneticist, they’re a relatively new breed, but they consistently lay a blue egg and that’s all that matters.  Don’t ask me which chick is which though. It’ll be a few weeks until I can answer with confidence.  But I can tell you that the Cream Crested Legbars have awesome hair!

Clearly, it’s easy to identify a Cream Crested Legbar.

But back to the hatching…about 7 hours after the first chick hatched we realized that one of the babies was struggling to escape to freedom. We learned from previous hatchings that not helping can lead to curled toes, vitamin deficiencies and death. (Remember the story about our rooster, Jerry) However, we’ve read that helping can cause development issues and even death, this is all based on the idea that people might force a chick out of the egg to early.

Our cat was obsessed with the hatching chicks.

This was not the case, so we decided to go ahead and open the egg. Carefully, with tweezers, patience and a warm, wet cloth to try to moisten shell and internal membrane. (The internal membrane that lines the inside of the egg, which you may have noticed when peeling a hard-boiled egg, dries out from the exposure to the air after the chick breaks the shell), so this little guy didn’t stand much of a chance without our help.

Check out the chick rescue video on Instagram @ArchiesAcres

It was a wonderful moment when we realized that we saved this sweet little baby. S/he was very weak from the rough start but has since made a full recovery. Here’s a pic from right after the “delivery.” The video of the rescue is on our Instagram feed as well.

Newborn baby chicken. We had to help this little one along.

We’re happy to report that all 3 chicks are doing well!

In the next day or so we have another incubator filled with 6 eggs that will (hopefully) be hatching. Stay Tuned for that!

Did you know that there is a rainbow of eggshell color possibilities!?!

We have really been getting into chicken “husbandry” this year. What exactly does that mean? Well, we have seen the egg shell color possibilities on Instagram and our working to expand ours. The chicken ladies on Instagram get real nerdy scientific with it and we’re both kind of obsessed with the possibilities.

egg, rainbow, chicken
Our current egg color selection. It’s a mini-rainbow!

Don’t get me wrong, we’re not taking our current ladies for granted! They do great work. We love the different shades of tan, white, pink and brown they give us. We just want to add a little more pizzazz to what we can offer our farmers market patrons. Because it’s fun. And we love pretty things.

Eggshell color is all about genetics.

So because of that we have researched chicken breeds and how to cross them to make different egg shell colors. We recently purchased Black Copper Marans, Cuckoo Marans and Welsummer chicks from Hoover’s Hatchery in Iowa to provide us with a dark chocolate egg…

maran, egg, chocolate, color
Marans have a beautiful chocolate brown egg.
Aren’t they gorgeous?

For the blue eggs needed for our rainbow, we ordered 4 Easter Egger chicks. 3 females and 1 male. And we also purchased 8 Whiting True Blue eggs from a farm in Florida and 6 Cream Crested Legbar eggs from a farmer in Pennsylvania. We are currently incubating all 14 and they should be hatching within the next week

How many chickens is too many?

I know what you’re thinking, “that’s a lot of chickens!” But really it’s not going to be. Our coop is set up to more than accommodate the chicks we bought from the hatchery. Plus the hatching rate for successfully incubating eggs is only about 40%. So we’ll be lucking to 5 out of the 14 we incubated. We’re good on space, but I admit that I’m a certified chicken lady. That being said we have well over 30 chickens right now.

Egg husbandry chart for colors:

This shows how to cross chicken breeds to create fun egg colors.

As you can see; the process is fluid and there’s no guaranteed result, but that’s the fun of it! We will have special chicken runs built to facilitate this process. And we specifically bought a Black Copper Maran male,  Cuckoo Maran male and an Easter Egger male.  The breed that comes from crossing a dark brown layer with a blue layer is generally referred to as an Olive Egger, and the olive/green tint varies vastly.

Green eggs chart.

So there’s your crash course in the wild world of chicken breeding for egg colors. We will have dark brown and blue eggs added to our current colorful arrangement by late summer. And olive, green and mint colored eggs by next Spring. We will also be selling fertilized eggs for people who would like to incubate and raise their own special Oliver Eggers. Keep a lookout for us!

Gardening season is almost here!!

Nothing beats Springtime in the Midwest!

As Midwesterners, after struggling through blizzards and freezing temps all Winter, springtime is always welcomed with open arms. However, this Spring is extra special, because we now have a yard (5 acres of it) with copious amounts of garden space. And we are over the moon about it!!! At our apartment in Chicago, I only had a 4′ by 5′ area on our deck to use as my personal garden. I had just enough space to grow a couple pepper and tomato plants. But now our current setup is a lower vegetable/fruit garden of 150′ by 30′ and an upper herb/flower garden about 18′ by 18!’ I’ve always hoped to be able to put my green thumb to work!

150′ by 30′ garden?! Only in my wildest dreams!

Having this much gardening space is amazing. And because of the endless space opportunities, I went a little crazy on seed buying. We have some very pretty and unique plant seedlings growing in our indoor greenhouse right now. Tomatoes and peppers are taking up the vast majority of pods at the moment. Mainly because they are best started indoors before transferring outside, unlike our radishes, kale, mesculin greens, melons, arugula, corn, peas etc which are best grown from direct sowing.

100+ starter pods are sprouting!
Greenhouse sprouting success! 22 varieties of happy little tomatoes.

22 varieties of tomatoes

We have blue, tie-dye, green, chocolate brown, yellow, orange, pink, orange /red striped, purple of all sizes…the list is a lot longer. We’re so excited for you to see them! And we’re even more excited to sell them at farmer’s markets this summer! Here is just one of the 22 varieties that I’m super pumped about…

Tigerella tomatoes. These are going to be beauties.

We also have 7 bright and colorful varieties of belle peppers. Purple and chocolate varieties included, of course. Here’s one of my favorites…

Purple belle peppers; not only yummy but super pretty too!

We have 7 varieties of hot peppers. The shishito peppers are a personal highlight, I’ve been obsessed with them for over a year now! Shishito peppers are small Japanese peppers that have the sweetest/most pungent flavor, they taste like a belle pepper x 100, but they’re considered a hot pepper because 1 out of 10 is spicy. They’re so delicious, even if you get a hot one, which isn’t really that hot.  I first tried them at Bangers & Lace in Evanston, IL. The head chef at the time, Justin Schaub, sautéed them and tossed them in with the fried cheese curds. The app was a real showstopper.

the color Purple looks great on food!

Not only do we have purple tomatoes and peppers but we have purple broccoli, kale, potatoes, cauliflower, green beans, Brussels sprouts, corn and tomatillos!  We are not only growing delicious, organic food but we want it to be pretty food!

 

 

 

Being a chicken lady isn’t always easy…

Life is not all about treats, cute faces and beautiful eggs when you’re a chicken mom. Oh and let’s not forget about chicks, and broody hens who surprise you with a new chick every now and then, and watching a sweet incubator hatching, and feathered mobs rushing your porch every morning…

Chickens can have health drama.

2 days ago, Floppy wasn’t up in the roosts at bedtime with her friends. She was kind of dazed, a little lethargic and very, overly people friendly. We knew something was off but we weren’t sure what. We have a checklist we go through when trying to figure out what’s wrong with a chicken. Is s/he pooping. What color is their comb. Can they walk. Can they stand. How’s their breathing. How do their eyes look. Those few questions narrow our course of action down significantly…there are 4 main concerns that we have when dealing with an oddly acting chicken.

Floppy, named after her awesomely floppy comb.

Is she egg bound? 

Every once in a while, due to a calcium deficiency, stress, a rare double-yoked egg and sometimes illness, a hen will be unable to lay an egg. Which will kill them. Think about it, the egg is in there until you help her get it out. If you don’t, and she can’t, she will die. Our first hen loss was in this way. Penelope, she was one of the 9 original chickens that came with our property, courtesy of the previous owners. We worked for 3 days to help her, and she was working too. We gave her warm epsom salt baths to relax her, making sure her backend was submerged. We made a little bed for her, a little bigger than a nesting box with a towel over top to give her a relaxing dark place to sleep. We even applied Preparation H to her since she had been working so hard for so long, to help ease some of her local pain from pushing. We worked really hard, and so did she. But to no avail. The loss was particularly tough.

Could it be Marek’s Disease?

This is a viral disease of poultry, primarily chickens. It can cause partial or total paralysis of the legs, wings, and even neck, it creates tumors in the body (often near nerves which causes the paralysis), blindness and death. It’s spread through dander so it’s a serious concern for us. If one chicken has it, they all will have it. But just having the disease doesn’t mean they’ll show symptoms, therefore all new members of our flock are required to be vaccinated and we will no longer be taking in rescues due to learning about it. So on that note, the first thing we’d look for is leg, wing or neck paralysis. And go from there.

Chickens get colds and flus just like humans do.

Wheezing. If there’s any wheezing or one eye is cloudy, they’re going into our homemade chicken hospital to begin intravenous antibiotics. We have had amazing success with 1cc of Duramycin 72-200, twice a day. We’ve had Claire, Newman and Ruby all make a full recovery after 5 days of treatment. Which makes a chicken mom feel really good!

Could it be chicken crop issue?

A sour or impacted crop is always a concern. The crop is basically the holding area for food before it travels to the stomach. We’ll often comment on a chickens’ “food boob” being especially large after a big meal, it’s because the thing is packed with food waiting to be digested and they’ve clearly had an amazing meal. A sour crop happens when the crop is never fully emptied, which means there’s old food in there fermenting, which results in a bacterial / yeast infection within the crop. Sounds pretty gross, because it is.  Long grasses, excessive amounts of bread and pasta, moldy food and inadequate amounts of grit can cause this.

Chicken Digestive Tract

Since our chickens free-frange, a lack of grit is not an issue, but undigestible pieces of manmade material is, little pieces of plastic or a rubber band, which is how an impacted crop can happen. A strange object is blocking the crop from being emptied. Chickens are nosy, they’ll peck at anything.  This is why I give the chickens a large bowl of yogurt a couple times a month. To keep things moving, keep a steady flow of good bacteria going. And I don’t often give them bread or pasta, which doesn’t offer much nutrition anyway. An impacted crop will feel hard and the sour crop will feel soft, and the best time to check is first thing in the morning, if the chicken is lethargic, since the crop is emptied almost completely overnight.

And none of these applied to Floppy…

Her lethargy and death happened abnormally fast. We found her standing on the coop floor, not even facing a corner (which chickens do when they’re sick) just staring at us. She had no symptoms of anything, aside from just wanting to curl up into a ball. She seemed dazed. Her crop was a little mushy, but not overly so. We gave her a epsom salt bath anyway. She would not open her beak for anything. We placed her in a dark warm corner with a towel. And she died peacefully the next morning. We think she must’ve eaten something poisonous. She was only a year old. It was really sad, and strange. We buried her next to Penelope at the south end of our property.

We buried Floppy next to Penelope, our 1st major hen loss.

 

 

 

Quick trip to the Third Coast and Kittens!

Michigan sunsets: Swoon!

The keepers of Archie’s Acres went on a quick trip to Union Pier, Michigan on Wednesday. We stayed at a wonderful little B&B and slept in until 9:30am 2 days in a row!! What?!! We also visited Greenbush Brewery, Round Barn Winery, St Julian Winery and the Journeyman Distillery, with a quick stop at Three Floyds Brewery along the way. And of course we did a little antiquing! However, if you’re looking for a bargain, this is the not the area to shop. The prices reflect the large amounts of money that have been moving into the area for decades.

Michigan: The Third Coast

It’s obvious, and accurate, why they call this area the Third Coast, behind the Pacific and Atlantic coastlines of course, because it really is. The beaches have soft, white sand and are home to the largest freshwater dunes in the world. The sunsets are on par with anything you’d see on the West coast of the United States. That’s my personal opinion anyway, even after living in California. One of the definite highlights of our little trip was walking down to Lake Michigan to catch the sunset. Absolutely stunning!

Union Pier, Michigan Sunset. March 16, 2017

A 2 day trip was the perfect amount of time to relax and recharge, especially since we have so many adorable little faces waiting for us on the farm. On Friday afternoon we got home just in time to see the kittens start to open their eyes for the first time!

5 Day Old Kittens Sure Are Cute!

This is Lima’s #1 baby. We know this because this was the first little face that popped up on Monday, and the rest are black!

 

March 13th, the day of the kitten!

Kittens happen…

As I should have known; yesterday didn’t go at all as planned. No fence and no chicken coop blueprints were made. And no new seeds were planted. Because….Lima had her kittens!!!

When life hands you kittens…

5 adorable mewing little bundles of adorableness. My wife had been working out in our “cave” all day to keep Lima company. (The cave is what we call the typical “man cave.” It’s a pretty sweet setup with a wood-burning stove, kegerator, kitchen and living room. It’s a work in progress, as most things are around here but it’s coming along) Lima was moving from my wife’s lap to the cold floor to her lap to the floor, clearly antsy and uncomfortable. Then Lima curled up on the towel and bubble wrap that had been piled up to give her a comfy and waterproof (for the protection of the couch) area to nest. Lima doesn’t make a peep for a little bit, then all of a sudden there’s a tiny meow.

Ninja kittens!?

And there s/he is! Kitten #1! Less than 2 hours later, we have 5 adorable new lives on the farm! 2 of them have her tabby coloring. But the other 3 appear to be black. Which was a surprise since Lima had tried to bring a large, orange friend into our house a month or so ago. But he was clearly late to that party!

Rescue cats are awesome…

I gotta say, Lima is a tough girl. Never complains. Toughs everything out. She’s appreciative. She was purring while giving birth! It made our hearts melt a little. I was able to capture a pic of the first kitten but things got a bit intense and not picture-worthy. If you know what I mean.  So for the next few days we’re giving Lima space to be a mom. But by this weekend! It’s on! I’ll have pics for you.

Kitten #1 right after her mom cleaned off her face.

Welcome to Archie’s Acres…

Welcome to Archie’s Acres

…and welcome to this, the first blog post of many to come. It’s the Monday after Daylight Savings time and the morning after a surprise (but not really all that surprising) overnight 4+ inch snow here in the Midwest. The chickens hate it but our dog, Archie, LOVES all the fresh powder everywhere! He’s been visibly smiling all morning, no exaggeration, as he runs laps around our small 5 acre farm in the fresh snow.

I’m guessing you’ve figured out where the name Archie’s Acres came from…

Archie is our 1 year old (turned 1 on March 4th) Australian Cattle Dog/Border Collie mix. We found him on a farm in Miles, Iowa near the hatchery that we visited last Spring, my only regret was that the farmer wanted us to take him immediately, but he was only 5 weeks, so we made up an excuse to allow him to stay with his mom for an extra week but still, taking him away from his mom at 6 weeks broke my heart a little. But he’s our little bear and he’s a barrel of personality and obviously, a total mama’s boy.

At this very moment…

we have 24 snow-hating chickens shouting in the chicken coop. I mean, I get it, they don’t wear shoes so snow is probably pretty uncomfortable to walk on. They also can’t see any grass, bugs or worms because of the snow, so I get that aggravation there too. So my temporary remedy for their unhappiness will be to bring them a huge bowl of oatmeal after I finish this post.

Chickens looooooove oatmeal…

…and if there’s anything a certified chicken lady loves; it’s making her chickens happy. Along with the 24 cranky birds currently throwing tantrums in the chicken coop, we have 2 injured chickens resting in a makeshift rehabilitation center in our garage. One of our best layers, Brownie our Isa Brown hen, injured her leg and is now confined to our cat’s travel carrier. She’s eating and drinking and in good spirits, she’s probably also really enjoying being warm and away from the snow. About 2 feet across from her is Newman, our lone Blue Laced Red Wyandotte rooster, he also has a busted leg. Chickens are very social creatures so there is something comforting about them having each other to recover with, not that I’m a fan of having 2 injured chickens, but it’s always easier to have a friend.

There is a such thing as a roost being too high…

I’m realizing now that the roosts in the chicken coop are too high off of the ground, they’re a good 10 feet high, the previous owners built them this way and since we had no idea what we were doing, being city dwellers and all, we just assumed they were just fine. So this past week has been all about building chicken ladders and ramps for the bigger birds to safely get down from the roosts in the morning. The drop is especially rough when they fly down out of excitement, which is basically only when I enter the coop with a treat. Because they know what it means if they see one of their humans holding a bowl!

Springtime is chick-time!…

So of course we also have 20 2-3 week old baby chicks in our homemade brooder in the garage. The brooder is a 6 foot tall wood wardrobe with 2 heat lamps inside. These babies were hand-picked from 2 different hatcheries in Iowa based on their breed’s egg color (in this case, they either lay blue or chocolate brown eggs), the rareness of the breed, their genetic broodiness and finally, some were picked to add a little unique coloring to the flock. As we approach farmer’s market season, it’s become important to us to offer a rainbow variety of egg colors since we discovered the vast color palette of farm fresh egg colors!

Chicken eggs come in a rainbow of colors…

To put it normally, there are so many awesome, natural egg tints and tones that exist in nature and that’s just so so cool! And if we think they’re THAT cool, other people need to see them too! So on that note…we are also currently incubating 14 eggs that I purchased and were shipped from a farm in Florida and a farm in Pennsylvania. These chickens will lay the most beautiful shade of blue/teal egg, naturally. Hoping for hens, of course, but considering our hatching luck in the past, the egg genders will be 3:1 roosters. But we’ll make it work no matter what the outcome because the thought of giving life to these sweet little birds makes me happy.

Our current egg color selection. It’s a mini-rainbow.

Our barncat is about to become a momcat…

Oh and on that note; we currently have our barncat, Lima, trapped in a makeshift delivery room in our garage. She is days, hours even minutes away from giving birth to what we guess are 4-5 kittens! She’s such a sweet cat. And if I’m being completely honest, she’s the nicest cat that we have! And she found us! When she arrived on our front porch last summer she was no bigger than a kitten herself, even though she had clearly just weaned or was still nursing kittens. She’s very small, her height seems to have been stunted, we’re guessing because of malnutrition, but regardless, she’s the nicest little girl. So cuddly and affectionate and appreciative. She will happily watch tv with us on the couch while our 2 actual indoor cats, Oscar and Tika, would rather not be touched and certainly not cuddled!

Our housecats are jerks…

Don’t get me wrong, we love our 2 cat babies that we brought into this marriage, but they are spoiled. So Lima is now more of a farmhouse cat than a barncat, which is a good and bad thing, we enjoy her cuddly company so much that we’ve taken her away from her work of being a master mouse hunter! So we’re looking forward to assigning posts to a couple of her kittens. One will be on mouse patrol in the chicken coop and the other will live in the garage. They’ll pay for their room and board with hard, fun work that they enjoy, which when you think about it, is a wonderful setup!

So back to the to-do list for today…

We currently have about 80 seed starter pods budding in our kitchen. We have a really fun variety of multi-colored peppers and tomatoes planted and prospering at the moment. We also have about 140 pods waiting to be used. But if I’m being honest, last night’s snow and the cold temps this week are giving us an urge to hold off on starting anything more at the moment but it’s the Midwest. Next week it will feel like spring. And then the week after that it will snow one more time. And then maybe after that it will be Spring for good. But maybe not. My wife is from NE Iowa and I’m from Chicagoland, so we know the games the weather plays. But to answer my own question, yeah we need to start some more seeds today. They need a 6 weeks head start before going into the ground anyway.

Pallet chicken coops are awesome…

We also need to finalize our pallet chicken coop and garden fence project by planning out the layouts and drawing up blueprints! We took about 30 pallets from a local tile shop with the intention of building a fence around our herb garden and a small chicken coop. As part of our future chicken breeding program, the four roosters that are currently 2 weeks old, will need to be separated from the hens in about 6 weeks and live in a bachelor pad.

Rooster bro time is important.

If there are no ladies around, they will live happily with each other bro-ing it up, watching sports and drinking beer like bros do. However, if they’re with ladies, they will fight each other to the death for alpha status. And we need these beautiful boys to be healthy and available for egg business this fall. There’s a very cool science about their specific breeds and uniqueness that I’ll explain later. And the roughly 2 foot tall garden fence will be to keep the rabbits and the chickens away from our herbs!

Well, we should probably get to work on today’s farm to-do list, and one of us should probably go check on Lima in the delivery room! Again, Welcome to Archie’s Acres!

 

Archie Artsy-ness.

 

Archie reflecting on the day

 

 

Just playing around with pics today. But this is a picture of Archie with a cool filter from the app Prism. Thanks for the cool filter, Prism.

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