Expanding the homestead and harvesting

What’s there to harvest and what animals did we get?

Well, that is just the way life goes. No baby, but back in action doing gardening and expanding our homestead.

My husband and children had finished planting all of de gardens. Some gardens did Ok, others where ratter disappointing. I will be reviewing our different type of garden beds after they have been harvested and prepared for winter.

Harvest

Meanwhile harvest has been somewhat disappointing. The onions where very small and I will not come around to buying onions in winter. I am trying to shorten the time that I will have to buy onions by using onion tops and spring onions as much as I can for as long as they are growing in stead of using the onions we have in storage.

The garlic did well and even had some nice size bulbs compared to last year. What I found so strange is that some of the garlic plants also made a small bulb in the stalk above ground level. I have never seen this before, but apparently some varieties do this instead of making a flower.

2 Garlic plants with nice bulbs and small bulbs higher up in the stalks

I am also saving some seed. The kale, unlike last year, survived the winter and bloomed beautifully. After the seed where done I cut all of the seedpods of and let them dry for a while. Deseeding the pods was a bit unpleasant, because the seedpods where a bit sharp and stung but with gloves on it was ok. We got enough seed to last us a life time.

Kale seedpods
Kale seeds in a jar
Kale seeds

We also collected seed from mustard, spring onions, lupine, peas, carrots, different grains and different flowers.

Seeds from carrots with some carrot seed heads
Carrot seeds

I am also drying some marigold flower leaves to make some calendula salve.

Marigold flower leaves on a paper towel to dry

We finally started to harvest tomatoes, but we are losing the plants to blight again. Surprisingly late since we are having rain for over a month already. Luckily we also have a greenhouse now and there is no blight in there yet. With the first chilli’s turning red in the greenhouse, I made a chilli sauce on tomato base. My husband enjoyed it very much after a few months without chilli sauce.

A harvest basket with tomatoes, chilli’s and a cucumber
2 jars with a home made tomato base chilli sauce
tomato base chilli sauce

Other then that we have been eating potatoes from the garden, but the beans have been very disappointing. We are also having some cucumbers from the greenhouse.

My sons Hokkaido pumpkin was the only pumpkin plant to really survive and thrive, so he is very proud of that and checks the crop every day.

An almost finished pumpkin with a small new still flowering pumpkin growing on a bed of straw

I have been trying to harvest some blackberries, but since they are wild growing most of them are hard to reach and will be enjoyed by the birds.

A blackberry with some nice fruit
Picked blackberries in a white bowl

As for our homestead

My husband left to collect sidewalk tiles at a friend’s house. He came home with 2 runner ducks (a couple). I’ve always wanted to have runner ducks to eat the so many slugs we have in the gardens. Apparently they also eat lettuce, so I did not let them in the main garden yet, but they where in our garden 3 with the compost bed with the potatoes. They seemed to find more then enough to eat there. As the type of crops growing will allow, they will be moved trough all of the gardens.

Runner ducks taking a swim

Well, since the runner ducks do not go into there coop we also bought some geese to protect the runner ducks against the fox. After that the potato bed, obviously, was done.

4 beautiful white geese on the look out

As the coop we build for the runner ducks stayed empty we also bought some meat chickens after which we where gifted some dwarf chickens we put in the coop with them. Well the coop was a bit small for all of these chickens, but after the meat chickens have been butchered the coop is a very comfortable home for the dwarf chickens (they are so cute).

4 dwarf chickens and a dwarf rooster sitting on fence

We got 5 female sheep, lambs from this spring, and we plan on breeding with them. They are still too young though, but next year in the fall we would need a male sheep as well.

4 blackhead sheep grassing

We went out for some hare to raise for meat, but now we have one female for breeding and 3 males which are the hare of the kid’s. It is unbelievable how much the kid’s love there hare and care for them and cuddle with them. I have never seen such tame hare before. Well, we can’t possibly butcher these, so it will just take a bit longer before we will eat some hare.

4 hare in there stables

Last but not least my husband gave me some fantails for our anniversary. They don’t really do anything, but are beautiful to look at.

4 gray fantails sitting in front of there coop

To finish up some beautiful pictures

A beautiful bright green grasshopper sitting on a hand
A beautiful bright green grasshopper
A little green frog sitting in the grass
A little frog
A beautiful pastel yellow sunflower against a bright blue sky
A pastel yellow coloured sunflower
Beautiful, compact grown, white borage against a bright blue shy
White borage

How is the, from caterpillars invaded, pear tree doing

New growth on the pear tree and flowers, flowers, flowers…

We had a pitiful sight this spring when we found our young pear tree eaten all leafs of by an army of caterpillars. We collected all of the caterpillars and after a few weeks the pear tree recovered. The pear tree grew new leaves and is looking good. It is amazing. Fruit trees make a blast of growth in the spring after which they seem to stand still and invest there energy in flowering and starting there fruit. After the development of the fruit the fruit trees make another blast of growth. Thanks to that the pear tree is looking good and healthy again.

A healthy looking pear tree against a cloudy sky

Here are some beautiful flower pictures I just wanted to share.

A beautiful white flowering virgin in the green
A beautiful white flowering virgin in the green
A beautiful red yellow rose flower against a background of its own leaves
A beautiful red yellow rose flower against a background of its own leaves
A beautiful blue morning glory among some marigolds
A beautiful blue morning glory among some marigolds
A beautiful pink zinnia with yellow stems
A beautiful pink zinnia with yellow stems
A beautiful blue morning glory hiding behind its leaf surrounded by marigolds
A beautiful blue morning glory hiding behind its leaf surrounded by marigolds
A beautiful lilac flowering leek against a garden background
A beautiful lilac flowering leek against a garden background
A beautiful lilac rose flower with yellow stems with little black bugs in them
A beautiful lilac rose flower with yellow stems with little black bugs in them
A small bee feeding on the lilac flowers of a leek
A small bee feeding on the lilac flowers of a leek
A beautiful bright yellow sunflower against the background of some raised beds
A beautiful bright yellow sunflower against the background of some raised beds
A beautiful sweet pea flower
A beautiful sweet pea flower

We build a chicken tractor

I wanted an A-frame chicken tractor, which I could move by hand, but what did my husband build me….

We have had chickens in the past and we wanted to have chickens again and we want to free-range them. This way the chickens provide us the best eggs ever. The only problem with that is that the rooster we had turned aggressive towards us, so we do not want a rooster again. Without a rooster we can not let the chickens free-range over our entire property, since they will not return to the stable. Chickens need a rooster for guidance. Another thing is the dogs we have. They would catch the chickens.

On the internet I had come across chicken tractors and thought that was the solution for us to keep chickens. I told my husband I would like him to build me an A-frame “light weight” chicken tractor for 10 chickens. A chicken tractor I would be able to pull a bit further every day, so the chickens would have a new piece of pasture every day.

Well, my husband did not like the A-frame. He was the opinion that I would bump my head, because the door would be so low and ratter small in with. Also for 10 chickens it would be a ratter large chicken tractor, so moving by hand would not really be an option anymore, especially over our very uneven pastures, so he built me this…

A classic style chicken tractor on a pasture

A classic style chicken tractor with a normal size door in the run to get in, although my husband still has to bend his head while getting in. The stable part also is bigger as it would have been in a similar size A-frame chicken tractor and is very suitable for the 10 chickens we have. The chicken tractor has 3 laying nests attached on the back side and 2 big doors on each side of the stable for easy access.

3 Laying nests at the back of the chicken tractor
The side of the stable of a chicken tractor with the door standing open, with 3 laying nests and 2 perches inside.

We always put the chicken feed and the water in the stable and it is very easy to clean out the stable with the big doors. The stable is about 1 meter above the ground, so the chickens can comfortably also free-range underneath. The overall size of the chicken tractor with the run is 3 x 1.6 meters and 2 meters in height. The stable is about 1 x 1.6 meters and 1 meter in height.

Obviously the chicken tractor turned out very heavy and we move it by tractor every 2 days, so the chickens will have a new piece of pasture to enjoy.

Chicken tractor hanging on a front end loader of a tractor for moving

We got ourselves 10 beautiful white Sussex chickens, which is a dual use breed. Good at laying eggs, but also good in meat with about 2 ½ years of age.

Sussex chickens on a green pasture inside the run of a chicken tractor

We feed the chickens grist out of peas, oats and wheat and they get our kitchen scraps twice a day. They always have chicken grit available, which they need to digest there food. Of course fresh drinking water is a must as well. They do lay a good amount of eggs. Sometimes we actually get 10 eggs on one day, but in average our 10 chickens lay 8 eggs a day, which is too little to cover our needs.

A Sussex chicken sitting in a laying nest to lay her egg
5 eggs laying in straw in a laying nest

Overall the chicken tractor turned out very nice. It is beautiful to the sight and the size is suitable for the 10 chickens we have. Since we go to bed early with the kids we catch the chickens every evening and put them in the stable, so we can lock them in. This way no predators can get to them. Chickens go into there stable at dawn and that is ratter late for the bigger part of the year and if the chickens would free-range on a larger piece of pasture we would not be able to catch and lock them in every evening. I do find hanging and moving the chicken tractor with the tractor every other day annoying and I would like to have more chickens, so my husband is going to build a larger mobile chicken coop on a trailer, with an electrical timer controlled door, so we won’t have to catch the chickens to lock them in anymore, but that is for another time…