What a fun thing! I went to the coop around 11:40 this morning to see if there was anything the chickens were up to and to my surprise there it was, right outside the nesting box inside the coop in the corner. The egg is a light brownish pink color suggesting it came from one of our Buff Orpingtons. The kids are very excited as am I. Can't wait to get more!
Pleasantly Palatable
...a place where good things collide
Tuesday, August 2, 2011
Sunday, April 3, 2011
Gotta Love Utah Weather!
Yesterday was a beautiful day. The temperature reached 75 degrees! When we woke up this morning there was a couple of inches of snow on the ground. The day was nice enough for us to take the chicks out for a little. Check out the pic...
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Another Project
In the next couple of weeks our chicks will be ready to move outside. I'm excited but nervous. I've loved having them inside, they are so cute and they make the most relaxing chirping sounds. They are getting bigger however, meaning they need more space to live. That means they'll need a coop and a run to live in.
My idea for a coop didn't involve spending $400-$500. No way! So I thought why couldn't I convert an old dog house into a coop? I can and I will! But wait, where was I going to get that old dog house? Oh yeah, we have one that Tess and Daisy used to use at our rental property and it's still there. So I got in my truck and picked it up. It sits in my garage waiting for the conversion (It's coming, I promise!)
When the dog house is ready, I'll need a different plan to feed the chickens as well. I've been researching different kind of feeders and have found one that I like--and I'm going to make it. Here's a pic:
This is a Treadle Feeder. When the chickens step on the treadle... |
...Voila! The lid lifts open and displays all their wonderful food. |
Here's a shot of what it will look like with the food inside. |
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Hmmm...What To Do With All That Chicken Poo?
A couple of days ago we had family over for Kennedy's birthday. We ate cake and ice cream and had a great time reminiscing about whatever. Well my brothers (Andy and Pat) and I have taken on the great hobby of chick raising. We all have between two to four week old chicks which means we're needing to get that coop ready. We were throwing around ideas for how we were going to design our coops when the discussion of chicken poop came up, I know that might sound disgusting, but it really is something to consider, especially if you have a garden. That's right, chicken manure is used for fertilizer. So I thought I'd do some more research. One of the blogs I get reads for came in today and much to my surprise, it was all about chicken fertilizer.
Here is the post from thegardenroofcoop.blogspot.com:
Here is the post from thegardenroofcoop.blogspot.com:
Q: A friend told me that chicken droppings can transfer harmful bacteria. He said not to use it for fertilizer. Is he right?--Chris
A: Great question Chris... All animal manures have the potential risk of containing bacteria, but the key to using it as a fertilizer is knowing how to use it safely and correctly. Manure from meat-eating animals, such as dogs or cats should not be used as a fertilizer because of the risk of transmitting parasites or diseases, but even chicken manure can contain pathogens such as E-Coli and Salmonella.
Image used by permission-Good Life Press The Chicken Lover's Cartoon Book by Arnold Wiles |
Chicken manure, however, is a sought after fertilizer for organic gardeners. It's rich in nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium (K), and when combined with straw or similar coop bedding it not only adds nutrients to the soil, but also organic matter. Because of it's high nitrogen content, though, it needs to age or compost before it can be used as fertilizer. It's important to not add fresh or "hot" manure directly to the garden in the spring, otherwise you'll end up killing or actually burning your plants. Also, some studies have shown that it takes six months to a year before you can ensure that any pathogens are not present in the composted manure. According to this study, conducted by the University of Minnesota, even bin composting, where the manure is maintained at a temperature between 130 and 150 degrees Fahrenheit for three days, is not a guarantee that all the bacteria has been destroyed.
The safest practice is to either allow the manure to age for the recommended time or incorporate it into the fall garden soil.--Better yet, allow the chickens to free range in the garden at the end of the summer harvest. They'll clean up the left over plants and weeds, scratch up the soil and leave their powerful "fertilizer" as an added bonus. Then six month later, your spring garden will be ready to go!
This is something I'm going to start doing. I've got to do something with all that stuff!
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Darn Good Chocolate Cake
Darn Good Chocolate Cake!
That's what that is...
So yeah, it's that good, and I love it.
Recipe:
1 package (18.25 ounces) plain devil's food or dark chocolate fudge cake mix
1 package (3.9 ounces) chocolate instant pudding mix
4 large eggs
1 cup sour cream
1/2 cup warm water
1/2 cup vegetable oil
1 1/2 cups semisweet chocolate chips
Directions:
1. Heat oven to 350 degrees F. Mist 12-cup bundt pan with oil spray and then lightly dust with flour.
2. Place cake mix, pudding mix, eggs, sour cream, warm water, and oil in a large mixing bowl. Blend with an electric mixer for one minute on low speed, stop and scrape down sides with rubber spatula. Increase the mixer speed to medium for 2-3 minutes. Batter should look thick and well combined. Fold in the chocolate chips, making sure they are well distributed throughout the batter. Pour the batter into the prepared pan, smoothing it out with the rubber spatula. Place the pan in the oven.
3. Bake the cake for 45-50 minutes. Remove from pan and place it on a wire rack to cool for 20 minutes.
Here is the cooled cake ready for the Genoche... |
Chocolate Genoche: (optional)
Recipe:
3/4 Cup Whipping cream
1 Cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
Directions:
1. Bring whipping cream to a boil
2. Add chocolate chips and stir until cream and chocolate mix turns brown
3. Pour Genoche over chocolate cake
Titanic
The past couple of weeks Kennedy, our little seven year old girl, has been rehearsing for the play at Lehi High School with her cousin Malynne. Her role is to play an eight year old named Marjorie Charlotte Collyer. Here's a bio of Kennedy's character:
Miss Marjorie Charlotte Collyer, 8, was born in 1904 in Bishopstoke, Hampshire, England, the daughter of Harvey Collyer and the former Charlotte Annie Tate.
The family boarded the Titanic at Southampton, they were travelling to Payette Valley, Idaho, USA.
Charlotte and Marjorie were probably rescued in lifeboat 14 but Harvey died in the sinking. After their arrival in New York Charlotte and Marjorie were approached by Newspaper reporters to tell their story, Marjory's account (reprinted in a local English paper) appears to have received the attention of a Brooklyn Daily Eagle reporter:
Charlotte and Marjorie eventually returned to Bishopstoke. Charlotte remarried but died in 1914 from Tuberculosis, Marjorie was made a ward of court and went to live with her uncle Walter on his farm at East Horsley, Near Leatherhead, Surrey. The arrangement did not work well but she remained there until she married Roy Dutton (on 25 December 1927), who was a mechanic.
Marjory Collyer Dutton died (? in Gosport, Hampshire) on 26 February 1965, aged 61. She had been a widow for some years after her husband died young.
Here's a little information about Marjorie's mother, Charlotte:
Mrs Harvey Collyer (Charlotte Annie Tate), 31, of 25, Church Road, Mount Hill, Bishopstoke, Hampshire boarded the Titanic at Southampton with her husband Harvey Collyer and daughter Marjorie.
Charlotte and Marjorie were rescued in lifeboat 14 but Harvey died in the sinking. Their experience in the boat was recalled by Charlotte Collyer in The Semi-Monthly Magazine, May, 1912 (for which she was paid $300).
Mrs Collyer and little Marjorie were absolutely destitute when they reached New York, but Mrs Collyer decided to continue on to Payette to start a new life like her late husband had wanted to do.
On April 21 she wrote to her mother:
Brooklyn, New York Sun April 21st My dear Mother and all, I don't know how to write to you or what to say, I feel I shall go mad sometimes but dear as much as my heart aches it aches for you too for he is your son and the best that ever lived. I had not given up hope till today that he might be found but I'm told all boats are accounted for. Oh mother how can I live without him. I wish I'd gone with him if they had not wrenched Madge from me I should have stayed and gone with him. But they threw her into the boat and pulled me in too but he was so calm and I know he would rather I lived for her little sake otherwise she would have been an orphan. The agony of that night can never be told. Poor mite was frozen. I have been ill but have been taken care of by a rich New York doctor and feel better now. They are giving us every comfort and have collected quite a few pounds for us and loaded us with clothes and a gentleman on monday is taking us to the White Star office and also to another office to get us some money from the funds that is being raised here. Oh mother there are some good hearts in New York, some want me to go back to England but I can't, I could never at least not yet go over the ground where my all is sleeping. Sometimes I feel we lived too much for each other that is why I've lost him. But mother we shall meet him in heaven. When that band played 'Nearer My God to Thee' I know he thought of you and me for we both loved that hymn and I feel that if I go to Payette I'm doing what he would wish me to, so I hope to do this at the end of next week where I shall have friends and work and I will work for his darling as long as she needs me. Oh she is a comfort but she don't realise yet that her daddy is in heaven. There are some dear children here who have loaded her with lovely toys but it's when I'm alone with her she will miss him. Oh mother I haven't a thing in the world that was his only his rings. Everything we had went down. Will you, dear mother, send me on a last photo of us, get it copied I will pay you later on. Mrs Hallets brother from Chicago is doing al he can for us in fact the night we landed in New York (in our nightgowns) he had engaged a room at a big hotel with food and every comfort waiting for us. He has been a father to us. I will send his address on a card (My Horder) perhaps you might like to write to him some time. God Bless you dear mother and help and comfort you in this awful sorrow. Your loving child Lot. |
The mother and child received relief from both the Mansion House Titanic Relief Fund:
Number P. 26. Collyer, Charlotte, widow and Marjorie, child. Received total £1 3s 0d per week. |
And the American Relief Fund:
No. 83. (English). The husband was drowned. His wife and seven year old daughter were saved. He was a merchant in England and had been the parish clerk in the village where they lived. They were highly respected people in fair circumstances. The wife had contracted tuberculosis and they were coming to this country to buy a fruit farm in Idaho, where they hoped the climate would be beneficial. He was carrying $5,000 in cash; this was lost, and all their household belongings. Both the widow and her daughter suffered severely from shock and exposure. They were at first unwilling to return to England, feeling that the husband would have wished them to carry out his original plan. For emergent needs she was given $200 by this Committee, and $450 by other American relief funds. After a short residence in the West she decided to return to her family in England. Through interested friends in New York City, a fund of $2,000 was raised, and she received $300 for a magazine article describing the disaster. She returned to England in June and her circumstances were reported to the English Committee, which granted £50 outright and a pension of 23 shillings a week. ($200). |
Charlotte and Marjorie eventually returned to Bishopstoke. Charlotte remarried but died in 1914 from Tuberculosis.
Here is Marjorie's account of the wreck:
Mrs. Tate, of Elm Villas, Leatherhead, has just received from her daughter (Mrs. Collyer) a copy of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, containing an account of the wreck of the Titanic, as depicted by her daughter Margery, eight years of age. It will be remembered that Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Collyer, who are natives of Leatherhead, left England with their little daughter on board the Titanic with a view of making their home in the United States, where Mr. Collyer had purchased some land with the object of starting fruit growing. Mrs. Collyer and her little daughter were among the survivors, but Mr. Collyer went down with the ill-fated liner. Little Margery Collyer tells her story to a representative of the paper in the following terms:-
"It was on a Wednesday we took the train to Southampton. Some of our friends were at the station to see us go, and some of them saw us off on the boat, I didn't think there was any boat in the world as big as the Titanic.
"The night the Titanic hit the iceberg I was asleep. It was about 11 o'clock. I didn't feel the bump and the ship started to back like a train, and I heard my mother say to my father that she guessed the works had stopped. He dressed himself and went on deck. ''
" I could hear feet on the decks. The boat seemed to have stopped. Then mother dressed me, took me by the hand and led me upstairs. She was in her night-dress, and I didn't have all my clothes on. I had a big dollie that I got two Christmases before, and we were in such a hurry that I left it behind. I cried for my dollie, but we couldn't go back.
"When we got on deck father was there going along the decks and trying to see the iceberg. But it had floated away. he said that some men had been playing cards when the ship hit the ice, and that all their cards fell on the floor, but they picked them up and went right on with the game.
"The decks were full of people. Some of them were crying. An officer said we should all put on life preservers, and my mother put one on me, and then fastened one around herself. Papa put one on too.
"I was crying for my doll, but nobody could go back and get her. Then someone said we should get into a boat and two men lifted me up and put me in a boat. My father raised me in his arms and kissed me, and then he kissed my mother. She followed me into the boat.
"The women in one of the other boats said they wanted somebody to row for them and father got in that boat".
"The stars were shining, and it was just like day. Some sailor put a rug around my mother to keep her warm. There were so many in our boat that we had to sit up all the time. Nobody could lie down. my mother was so close to one of the sailors with the oars that sometimes the oar caught in her hair and took big pieces out of it.
"There was one officer in our boat who had a pistol. Some men jumped into our boat on top of the women and crushed them and the officer said that if they didn't stop he would shoot. Another man jumped and he shot him. My mother says I called out: 'Don't shoot!' but I don't remember it.
"The sailors had to row fast to get away from the ship. We could hear the band playing, but we didn't see the musicians. Only, when we left, all the people on the decks were kneeling down praying, while the band played, 'Nearer My God To Thee'.
"When the band finished one of the musicians, jumped into a boat with his instrument, and I guess he got away.
" While we were rowing away we heard a lot of people crying, and the women in our boat asked the officer what the noise was. He said the people on the decks were singing.
"I saw the Titanic go up in the air before she sank, and she looked ever so big.
"When we got a little way off another boat came near us, and an officer in our boat said he guessed he would go back to the wreck in it. I don't know who he was, but he put some of the people from the other boat in ours, and got in that. Then he went back with some sailors and pulled six men into the boat. "We rowed around for seven hours. All the time I was frightened a whole lot, and sometimes I cried. I cried hardest when I thought of my dollie back there in the water with nobody to mind it and keep it from getting wet.
"The women in the boat just sat up and didn't say anything. We were all very tired and cold, when we saw a big light. Somebody said it was a boat, but I thought it was just a star. But it kept getting bigger and bigger, and then we saw that it was a boat. Then all the sailors rowed hard.
"We had to sleep on the floor on the new ship, and it wasn't so nice as it was on the Titanic: but everybody was very kind to us. We thought papa would be there, but the boat he was on didn't get to the ship."
"It was on a Wednesday we took the train to Southampton. Some of our friends were at the station to see us go, and some of them saw us off on the boat, I didn't think there was any boat in the world as big as the Titanic.
"The night the Titanic hit the iceberg I was asleep. It was about 11 o'clock. I didn't feel the bump and the ship started to back like a train, and I heard my mother say to my father that she guessed the works had stopped. He dressed himself and went on deck. ''
" I could hear feet on the decks. The boat seemed to have stopped. Then mother dressed me, took me by the hand and led me upstairs. She was in her night-dress, and I didn't have all my clothes on. I had a big dollie that I got two Christmases before, and we were in such a hurry that I left it behind. I cried for my dollie, but we couldn't go back.
"When we got on deck father was there going along the decks and trying to see the iceberg. But it had floated away. he said that some men had been playing cards when the ship hit the ice, and that all their cards fell on the floor, but they picked them up and went right on with the game.
"The decks were full of people. Some of them were crying. An officer said we should all put on life preservers, and my mother put one on me, and then fastened one around herself. Papa put one on too.
"I was crying for my doll, but nobody could go back and get her. Then someone said we should get into a boat and two men lifted me up and put me in a boat. My father raised me in his arms and kissed me, and then he kissed my mother. She followed me into the boat.
"The women in one of the other boats said they wanted somebody to row for them and father got in that boat".
"The stars were shining, and it was just like day. Some sailor put a rug around my mother to keep her warm. There were so many in our boat that we had to sit up all the time. Nobody could lie down. my mother was so close to one of the sailors with the oars that sometimes the oar caught in her hair and took big pieces out of it.
"There was one officer in our boat who had a pistol. Some men jumped into our boat on top of the women and crushed them and the officer said that if they didn't stop he would shoot. Another man jumped and he shot him. My mother says I called out: 'Don't shoot!' but I don't remember it.
"The sailors had to row fast to get away from the ship. We could hear the band playing, but we didn't see the musicians. Only, when we left, all the people on the decks were kneeling down praying, while the band played, 'Nearer My God To Thee'.
"When the band finished one of the musicians, jumped into a boat with his instrument, and I guess he got away.
" While we were rowing away we heard a lot of people crying, and the women in our boat asked the officer what the noise was. He said the people on the decks were singing.
"I saw the Titanic go up in the air before she sank, and she looked ever so big.
"When we got a little way off another boat came near us, and an officer in our boat said he guessed he would go back to the wreck in it. I don't know who he was, but he put some of the people from the other boat in ours, and got in that. Then he went back with some sailors and pulled six men into the boat. "We rowed around for seven hours. All the time I was frightened a whole lot, and sometimes I cried. I cried hardest when I thought of my dollie back there in the water with nobody to mind it and keep it from getting wet.
"The women in the boat just sat up and didn't say anything. We were all very tired and cold, when we saw a big light. Somebody said it was a boat, but I thought it was just a star. But it kept getting bigger and bigger, and then we saw that it was a boat. Then all the sailors rowed hard.
"We had to sleep on the floor on the new ship, and it wasn't so nice as it was on the Titanic: but everybody was very kind to us. We thought papa would be there, but the boat he was on didn't get to the ship."
Friday, March 25, 2011
Diet Don'ts...
I've never done a diet in my life until October of last year. When I knew it was time to do something that worked with my lifestyle (which was mostly sitting around in the evenings on the couch watching reality TV with Kira) I tried HCG and it worked wonders for both of us.
We're now in our third round of the diet. We're having some great success. Yesterday was Kennedy's birthday party so we broke a few rules. We had pizza, some cheese bread, chocolate cake, and to top it all off we had freshly made tortilla chips and some really hot and spicy salsa that we smothered with cream cheese to help alleviate the hotness. We knew it was a splurge, and new we're feeling it. We both gained of course, we were expecting it, but what doesn't feel good is that we work so hard to get this far and then to see us go back where we were a few days ago. It kind of puts a lot in perspective.
We're going to finish out the diet without any 'splurges' and hopefully we can reach our goals.
We're now in our third round of the diet. We're having some great success. Yesterday was Kennedy's birthday party so we broke a few rules. We had pizza, some cheese bread, chocolate cake, and to top it all off we had freshly made tortilla chips and some really hot and spicy salsa that we smothered with cream cheese to help alleviate the hotness. We knew it was a splurge, and new we're feeling it. We both gained of course, we were expecting it, but what doesn't feel good is that we work so hard to get this far and then to see us go back where we were a few days ago. It kind of puts a lot in perspective.
We're going to finish out the diet without any 'splurges' and hopefully we can reach our goals.
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