Posts Tagged ‘farm’
Saturday, August 14th, 2010
Chicken coups can be bought or they can be built. Building your own chicken coup saves the owner good money as well as gives him or her the opportunity to select the design or style he or she wants. Before starting your project, there are five things you must know about your new feathered friends.
1 – Chickens need their space: Make sure you provide a minimum of four square feet per standard chicken in the coup and ten square feet per chicken in the run. Don’t build a smaller coup; instead, always build a bigger one, even bigger than what you need right now. Raising chickens can be quite addictive and it’s much easier for you to build a bigger coup today than having to run around building a second one the next near.
2 – Chickens will surely poop all over the place if given the chance: Make sure you place the feeders as well as waterers out of harm’s way. Allowing your chickens to roost on their nesting boxes is a bad move because they will surely poop on them. Place poop trays under their roosts.
Tags: building chicken coop, chicken care, chicken coop, chicken coup, farm, farm ranch, farming, gardening
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Saturday, August 14th, 2010
You have your chicken house plans, your materials and your tools and are ready to start building. But are you building in the right location. It’s like real estate, padre, your chicken house’s success depends on location, location, location. These five dynamics you cannot neglect while choosing your site.
1 – Light: Your chicken house needs to be situated to maximize the available light. The sun should be able to get in through the windows to warm your chickens and their dwelling. To lay eggs, chickens need approximately 14 hours of light a day.
2 – You want to keep out nature’s elements like rains or flooding by slightly elevating the structure. A location somewhat sheltered from high winds would also be wise. You might want to consider the worst that the weather can offer in your settings and locate this chicken house accordingly. You have to keep these chickens of yours safe from the worst of nature’s fury.
3 – To protect from predators, you must erect a chicken house and run that can keep them out with sheer strength, but one also not far from your home so that your presence makes a difference. This way, you can see and your aren’t far away from your chicken flock. If you live on a farm, locating your coop near large grazing animals will also help deter predators.
Tags: building chicken coop, building chicken coup, caring for chickens, chicken care, chicken coop, chicken coup, farm, farm ranch, farming, gardening
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Tuesday, June 1st, 2010
If you are a gardener that is always looking to find a better way, then you will want to think about purchasing tractor rotary tillers. These tillers are an excellent way to mix up the soil, to kill weeds and to prepare beds and gardens for planting. You will find that the tractor rotary tiller is a great tool which is easy to use.
Rotary tillers are PTO or motorized cultivators which have spinning tines to dig in the soil and lift the earth to turn it. Those tines are attached to a shaft which is powered using a transmission in order to give the needed torque to dig through the hardest of soils. Some of these tillers are designed for work in small beds while others large swaths.
Any type of tiller is an excellent way to aerate the soil and combine fertilizers or composts into the soil. They have been shown to be very effective at this type of work. The smaller tillers can be used to mix components before adding to the garden or can even be used for mixing your own blend of potting soil.
Tags: farm, food plot, garden, garden tiller, gardening, rototiller, tiller, tractor attachments, Tractor implements, tractor tiller
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Sunday, May 30th, 2010
Are you looking for ways to save money, but still provide your chickens with the perfect poultry house? Are you determined to find out how to build a chicken coop? Good! Keep reading and see how I can help aid the construction process with some simple things that you need to remember.
Selecting the perfect location
The location of a coop is potentially more crucial than most people think. A lot of people feel that a poultry house can be dumped anywhere, and that is really not the case.
The main thing to do when looking for the location is finding flat ground. It is essential that the ground is flat otherwise it will need to be flattened before the build. Also, try and keep it away from trees that might fall on it in bad weather – they could damage your coop.
The size
The size of the poultry house is probably more important than you think. When looking at how to build a chicken coop, planning out the exact coop size to ensure you have the space.
As a minimum, look to get around 4 square foot per chicken as a minimum, that should be more than adequate.
Tags: animals, birds, chicken, coop, farm, farming, food, garden, gardening, hobbies, lifestyle, pets, poultry, ranch
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Saturday, May 29th, 2010
Are you looking to raise poultry? Do you want to find them a comfortable home? Great! Hundreds of people start doing exactly that every day, but before buying any, make sure you can provide them with the perfect place to live. Chicken Coops Plans will allow you to determine exactly what you need to do and how to do it!
A poultry house can literally cost thousands of dollars, but it does not have to be this way. By embarking on a DIY project, you could save a huge amount of money, and actually have some money along the way.
There are plenty of things that need to be taken into account before starting the build, and here are what I consider to be the top 4!
Tip #1 – Adequate space
There is literally no point keeping chickens if you do not have the space that they need. This is something so many people get wrong, so do not make the same mistake. If you do make this mistake, then they are likely to be extremely uncomfortable and you risk the chance of them attacking each other.
Tags: animals, chickens, diy, farm, food, garden, gardening, home, leisure, pets, poultry, Product Reviews, ranch, sheds
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Saturday, October 31st, 2009
The best-selling book on “popular mycology,” Mycelium Running, would be a useful reference book in every home, especially to anyone involved in farming (or gardening), forest management and environmental cleanup. The second half of the book is an instruction manual on growing delectable mushrooms for food and medicine.
The book is filled to the brim with valuable information on how to improve soils for farming, gardening and forestry; create simple, low-cost biofilters for waste water (mycofiltration); and clean up toxic waste (mycoremediation).
As an example, a method for building a mycofiltration bed to filter waste water is described in exacting detail. Dimensions, depth, layers and recommended materials and mushrooms are listed. This mycofiltration is useful, among other things, for filtering manure enriched farm runoff.
Not only does it solve the problem of farm runoff and E. coli contamination of nearby streams, it can also yield highly palatable food mushrooms, and the bed itself can be dug out every 2-3 years and then used as an excellent fertilizer for the farm.
Tags: agriculture, biology, chicken, ecology, Environmental, farm, farming, garden, gardening, herbs, horse, landscaping, mushrooms, nature, tree
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Sunday, February 10th, 2008
by Argo Pikes
One of the most useful inventions of its time for farming is the garden tractor. These garden tractors were capable of doing all kinds of work in a family farm. At the time of tractor pulling, it created a hub for people to get together and also a chance to visit different towns to get their farming work done.
This also created an opportunity for the people to visit new towns, enjoy food at a nice place & stay away for home in a motel. You would also get a change to enjoy the countryside and go sights seeing in the neighboring town. To make the most of the garden tractor there were attachments that were available but all had one thing on common, i.e. mowing the lawn.
However, mowing the lawn is something they were all designed to do. The lawnmower with an electric start was in a great demand as the other type had a pull start. It would be advisable to make a test drive for the lawnmower before you make a decision to buy it as it does cost a fortune to buy one.
Tags: agriculture, farm, gardening, heavy equipment, home and garden, lawnmower, lawnmowers, machinery, tractor, tractors
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