Monday, November 12, 2012

more chooky pictures

Have I mentioned yet that I love chooks?
Silver campine chick at 8 days old.

3 silver campine chicks

little lavender aracauna peeking out
So cute!
Julia on the left and grandma
lucky
Serena
the ranga, she lets me carry her around. She is a nice chook.
more soon, hope you can stand it.
Dayla

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

I love my garden

A wonderful show from this mollis azalea. It is such a pick me up after a long cold Winter

This one looks like fire in the background. Fairly hidden it is.

This is my original cymbidium orchid. The flowers were so unblemished this year. The plant was undercover almost as soon as the buds appeared.


Pear blossom and butterfly. We will have a handful of pears from our tree this year. First time!
Veggie garden a few weeks ago now. Fabulous azalea peaking through the back. I cut the rhododendrons back last year as they were smothering it, and now am being rewarded with a great show.

We put this old swing frame into the veg garden and will use it as a climbing frame for some smaller pumpkins, cucumbers and tomatoes. Good for throwing a net over too. What else are we going to do with the thing anyway?

looking across the garlic crop, it is doing well.

The garden out the back door. It has really come on this second year. The ajuga with the purple spikes on the ground was stunning. Orchids really love it here too.

I took a photo of this just before I cut it down. Wisteria on a tree is bad news for the tree. Above ground and underground. It has such an extensive root system and are very hard to kill. Can take years of cutting and painting with Glyphosate. So we pulled down what we could and am retraining it away from the tree and onto the boundary fence where is can go along and look lovely there.
Dayla

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

photos of the garden

Our house. This time next year it should be much closer and turned 90 degrees. Making it solar passive.

pink azalea

driveway garden

I love this view.

Goodenia ovata is a local native plant. We have lots of them popping up all over. I love em!
Hibiscus in the background coming into leaf looks delightful in the bright sunshine

Babianas growing in a window box.

red and white azaleas are eye catching. This bed will have to be demolished to make way for the truck to pick the house up. We will do it in Autumn so the plants don't die, hopefully!

lots of colour

I never tire of this view.
Dayla

Monday, November 5, 2012

Crumpets turn at being a mother

Here is Crumpet and her chick.
In the bath together
Our fabulous Waratah!
my desktop picture
yellow evergreen Azalea

So delightful

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Plumpets second brood 2012

Well Plumpet has had her second brood,

Last Monday actually and I thought I had better get her photos up as Crumpet will be hatching her brood tomorrow.
So Plumpet sat on 6 eggs like last time and like last time one didn't hatch, infertile most likely.
I got the 6 from a man round the corner who breeds rare chooks.
http://www.rarebreedspoultry.com/rare_breed/Home.html
4 silver Campine and 2 Lavender Aracaunas.


So one of the campines didn't hatch. But then we had an accident. All my fault and I feel bad about it. A small gap was left in the Aframe house where plumpet was sitting. Between the nesting box and the run. One of the aracaunas fell into it and couldn't get out and died of exposure.
I had a brick against it last time but this time I forgot to check it. We worked so hard making sure it was mouse proof as last time we had some burrowing in under the edges to pinch the food and poop in everything. Not good for baby chooks!

So Plumpet has 4 babes and she is very proud and happy and looks more at ease and pleased than last time. Perhaps last time was her first time and now she is a veteran at chick rearing. Anyway she is very good at it.

So we clipped small holed avery mesh around the outside edges of the Aframe and banged it into the ground with tent pegs, it extend some 20cm out so creatures can't dig under.
Mind you she is also in the larger chook run with 1.8m high boundary fences to keep foxes out too. And like last time the older chooks can walk nearby and see the new babes and get used to them.
This is the Aframe house she is in. I won't recommend it as a regular chook house but for rearing little chicks it is quite good. Cost us $500 in 2005.
Being metal it doesn't harbour pests and can be hosed out when vacated. I have grown grass in there this time for Plumpet to share with her chicks. It doesn't come with perches so big chooks will sleep in the nesting box and shit over any eggs -not good! We made perches for it but the chooks didn't like them and still sat on the eggs. Chooks do most of their pooping at night and then lay in the morning on top of it.
No where to hang food hoppers and water bottles easily.
When we move it M and I get inside, one at each end, him at the heavy end and we push up with our shoulders and walk along with it on our backs. Must look hilarious, we always crack up when we move it cause we crash into stuff and look funny all hunched over. Anyway hopefully it will stay where it is for all time now as it is pegged to the ground.
Well the sun is shining and M wants to walk up the back in the sun, mind you the wind is blowing a gale, I hate wind!
cheers
Dayla

Friday, October 12, 2012

Foxes don't kill chooks, complacency does!

Well you win some and you lose some. We have 4 new baby chicks to delight in, but the fox came last week and killed 2 of our older girls. Meggs and Amy Pond. (Coincidence that Amy Pond left Dr Who nearly the same day?!)
Yes we got complacent and went out to lunch and left the chooks behind a temporary fence on a grassy patch. They had happily been there for months and nothing happened, but I was always here. We left them alone and it came and killed two of our girls. It is amazing it didn't kill the rest but we must have come home and scared it off.
Funny, we went up to check on them and collect eggs about 2.30pm not long after we got home.
The 3 boss chooks came running to us and gathered round and chatted to us looking up, they were clearly agitated. We looked around for the rest and they were hiding under some bushes. Looking round further we discovered a grizzly body and then another in the garden. Heads gone and guts eaten.
So we have lost 5 hens to foxes in a year and gained 3 new hens from a March hatching and 4 tiny babies hatched on Monday and more coming on Tuesday.
So we keep the girls in the higher pen with 1.8m tall fences all round. They have access to lots of greens.
We have seen the fox running through the paddock next door, all this during the day! Trotting along, healthy red brown, with tail in the air on its way for some other unsuspecting chook.
When we see a fox or have an attack we ring our neighbour to warn her the fox is about, she texts other neighbours and we are all alerted. I just wish some one would shoot it.

There laying dropped of for a few days too, they were really upset.
Anyway here are some nice pictures to cheer us up. Some Azaleas from our garden being gorgeous.








I also have an amazing yellow evergreen Azalea which is not quite open yet. Give me a week or two. It is going to be amazing!

cheers for now
Dayla