Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Rabbits everywhere!!!



Our rabbits have been very prolific... we have counted at least 10 babies in the rabbit stall the last few weeks, but they are hard to count, as the young ones spend most of their time below ground in burrows, and even the tastiest treats only lure the ones within view that are... not napping when the smell of fresh grass or carrots is wafting through the stall and burrows???

We are in the process of moving our rabbit colony from a modified horse stall into a new rabbit shed. So far, only our buck Spotty and his youngest daughter, Shay, who is not mature enough yet to have babies, have been moved over. Remaining in the old colony settings are Gustl, our colony matriarch, and her first daughter, Brown Sugar. I think the big litter with 10 babies is Gustl's achievement. We are guessing that they are about 5 weeks old. we will probably move them into the shed next week, as they can be weaned at 6 weeks and Gustl will deserve a break!!!

A few days ago, we accidentally broke into a burrow while excavating some dirt that has to be moved into the new shed... and found another nest of baby bunnies! These are just a few days old and have just gotten their fur and their eyes just opened. They are so cute!!!
We can't wait till they will venture above ground for trying out solid food and treats.

Last night, disaster struck: The stall door was left open and this morning, we could not see any young ones in the stall at all. Gustl Brown Sugar were still (or again) in there, but no young rabbits to be seen. We then found 4 in a corner behind some 2x4s. a little later, i found 2 more behind the feed bins. Later yet, i found 2 more again behind the constructions wood pile. When my daughter came out of school, we found 2 more. 4 + 2 + 2 + 2 --- great! seems like we got all the rabbits back! but what is that... another rabbit running through the barn! and that - is that another brown and white baby out there in the yard? At some point, I lost count but i THINK we caught at least 12 babies. We still think there might be one more rabbit at least out there... we left the barn doors open last night, too, so it is not surprising that not all young bunnies stayed in the barn. More surprising that i didnt see any half eaten rabbits on the property this morning!

So, we borrowed my friend's Skunk trap (which has proven useful in catching anything but skunks, see previous blog) and hopefully we will catch another baby rabbit or two. Here we had a new problem - how to lure a young rabbit into a trap, when there is a ton of nice lush grass growing in the lawn by the barn? :-) - We decided to give carrots and dried bread a try.

This might be a very weird situation where we start with 10 baby rabbits, then loose them all, and then find 12 more or to have more than we started out with!
You just never know with rabbits living colony style. More about our rabbit colony project in another blog...

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Jasper the Donkey



We have a new friend at the barnyard - Jasper the Donkey! Jasper was a really lucky find - he is still pretty young at 3 years old, and LOVES people and especially kids. He comes from a petting zoo and has really good manners. Donkeys are infamous for being - well- stubborn and temperamental. We have never had a donkey before, and it is amazing how they are so much like horses but so much alike! Horses are just sooo cooperative most of the time! It surely is a fact that is not appreciated enough by us horse lovers.
Jasper is a very good little donkey though. He LOVES to get the inside of his huge ears rubbed... he will hang his head and stick out his lower lip in ecstacy. It looks very cute. He is so soft! His fur feels nothing like horse fur... he sure is very shaggy, but is soft like a pillow. A shag pillow!

My friend, who co-owns him with me, has a small saddle that we tried on him, but I didn't like the way it fit, so I bought a small riding pad for him. I think he likes it, and has been very good at giving little kids ride... for a little while. He will tell me when has had enough, donkey way, and I take his hints and set him free after a job well done. Jasper might be a very nice donkey, but he is donkey enough to not let me forget that all the work he does is just a favor to me, not because he really thinks he has to!!!

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Getting Hay



It's that time of the year... time to re-fill our hay loft with precious hay. For anybody who has no farm animals, it seems easy enough... cut grass, bale, transport, stack and store.
Well, there is definitely more to it than meets the eye - especially a lot of sweat!

This year, we decided to buy the hay from a local farmer, pick it up in the field with our truck and flat bed trailer and also get it into the loft and stack it ourselves.

First of all, not all hay is the same. there is timothy hay, brome hay, both types are grass hay; then there is alfalfa hay, hay full of clover, hay with too much weed... The list could probably go on and on, it is regionally very different what kind of grasses and legumes grow best.
Most horse owners will buy only one or two kinds of hay and refuse to use other types for their horses. The protein content can be very different and have great effects on the horses health and temperament. An "easy keeper" is a horse that will thrive on a low protein diet and should receive grass hay only with just a little bit if any supplemental grain or pellets.

For the farmer, the most difficult part is to judge when to cut the grass. Cut grass needs to dry, the faster the better, and should not be rained on at all. It needs to be turned, and eventually, baled with a baler. Some bigger operations load up the hay bales as soon as they are baled, transport them and store them somewhere safe and dry, but i have seen hay bales sitting in the fields waiting to be picked up everywhere this year. Once the hay is baled, it should definitly not get rained on at all anymore, as this will most often lead to moldy hay inside the bale, which can make the hay unpalatable at best and dangerous to eat for the intended animals in the worst cases.

Another danger of wet or not suffieciently dried hay is that it can lead to "spontanteous combustion" while being stored! Slightly wet hay will decompose, and decomposing produces heat. Under the right conditions, when stacked rather tightly in a hay loft that is hot from the outside temperatures, this can lead to combustion which can burn the whole barn down!

But back to our hay. We were hauling and stacking, hauling and stacking, then unloading and tossing, and shifting and finally stacking again all Thursday long. It is so much hard work!

We came upon a hay elevator earlier this year - it's really just a very basic conveyor belt, about 7-10 ft long, that one positions with one end on the ground and the other in the doorway or opening to the loft. Then, one can put the hay bales on it and it carries them up into the loft. Ours is electric, so all we need to run it is an outlet. IT SURE BEATS THROWING THE BALES INTO THE LOFT!!!
Just for the records, a bale of hay is usually about 2x2x3 ft large and weighs anywhere from 60-80 lbs. I could definitely tell that i had been lifting some weight after just stacking about 80 bales onto our trailer, and we still had to unload and get another trailer full!

Unfortunately, i hurt my calf jumping off the completely loaded first trailer and had so much problem with my leg in the end, that two of our friends came over and helped Matt get the hay into the loft. Of course it started pouring, too, as we were getting done - we had about another 10 or 15 bales to go when it started raining dogs and cats. Typical Colorado thunderstorm.. we shoved some of the bales into the barn really quick, and used the bales that did stay outside first over the next few days, so no damage done. Thanks to Andrea and Jessica for all their help!

Unfortunately for the farmer, we were the first to pick up hay from his field, and he had at least as much more still sitting there as we picked up. I asked him what he was going to do with the bales that got rained on, and he said he would have to sell it for cheap. Too bad, it is some fine hay!

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Cheryl's SKUNK trap!


My friend Cheryl has a nice big barn where she feeds her barn cats, some tame, some mostly feral. She also seems to have a resident skunk who loves the cat food.. yum yum. So, recently, Cheryl purchased a skunk trap, one of those rather large cage contraptions where an animal can crawl in, but not out, to catch the skunk. I guess her barn gets kind of smelly, and her dogs, Labradoodles, get even more smelly. Hehehehe.
However, catching a skunk is not all that easy... here is her latest account on the skunk trap activities... (Quincy is one of the labradoodles)

OK.....So, I haven't caught a skunk yet in my skunk trap, but I have caught:

The feral cat, Geri
The yellow cat, Tiger
The gray cat, Smokey
The yellow cat again, Tiger
Quincy's head.....twice

and now.......ta da..........a Cuckoo Maran hen, Luverne!

She did make good use of her time, though, and ate all the cat food while she waited to be rescued!

Welcome Billy and Zorro!



We have new members of the petting zoo! Welcome to Billy, the black pigmy goat, and his "brother" Zorry, a tan, brown and black LaMancha goat. I am guessing on Zorro's breed, but he has the most odd looking tiny ears and my book says that LaMancha goats have little or no visible ears at all. Very weird indeed. :-) I havent found out yet why anybody would breed the external ear away from a breed of animal.. but ... there is no limit to the fancy of people I guess. LaMancha goats are a milking breed (but since Zorro is a neutered male, it hardly matters) that originates in Oregon and is supposed to be hardy and still produces under adverse conditions.
Back to Billy and Zorro.. I am not actually sure how old they are, but they sure are a funny pair. Billy, the short but fat guy, seems to be the boss, I think he is just a little more daring and bold. Zorro rather prevers retreat over confrontation, but supposedly was raised by a child and actually seemed to warm up a lot faster towards my daughter than to me! Way to go, Zorro!
The horses were very interested in teh goats and spent quite some time visiting with them while they were locked up temporarily in the dog kennel in the back pasture.
Oh, and i love the way these guys manage to scratch their backs with their horns!!! Very ingenious or "goaty" I guess!

Monday, August 10, 2009

Silly Horse Pictures























I was just thinking about sharing some of my funnier pictures I have taken of the horses over the years...

Jesse... he likes to make faces. He is good at rolling his tongue sideways and then flipping it over.. It's hard to describe and impossible to take a picture of, but it is very cool indeed. Here are just some pictures where he looks goofy.







Beau just likes me to take pictures of him while he roles.... ahhhh, feels so good.












and then there is Harley.. here, chasing TJ.














Oh, and here is another silly Harley picture.. this was taken during late morning siesta...




Thursday, August 6, 2009

New Baby Chickens hatching!



We are so excited to experience the hatching of our eggs that have been incubating in our incubator for 3 weeks!!! Every time anew, it is so amazing and wonderful to see a little chick fighting its way out of the shell into the world! This time, we ordered 2 dozen fertile eggs from a breeder in Oklahoma - theses eggs are from a chicken breed that is pretty rare here in the USA. The chickens are called Appenzeller Spitzhauben and are very different looking, with a feathery top hat and black polka dots on white all over... I will write another blog about our cute Spitzhauben soon...
By chance, one of our laying hens, Welly, became broody again 2 weeks ago. A broody hen will sit on a clutch of eggs and try to hatch it, a trait that has been mostly bred out of modern chicken breeds, because a broody hen will not lay any additional eggs (besides the ones she sits on, and those don't have to be her own, she doesn't care). Chicken reproduction today relies to a very large part on incubator machines, who do the tedious job of "sitting on a clutch of eggs" instead of the mother hen.
But back to Welly: I set Welly up with a few fake eggs in a separate cage to await the hatch day of the eggs in the incubator. Then, as the eggs hatch, I have placed the chicks gently under the hen one by one... Removing all the fake eggs. Any broody hen will only accept chicks for a few days, similar to a normal spread of time it takes for a clutch of eggs to hatch.
It is SO EASY for a chicken momma to tend to her young... they can be raised entirely without a mother, that's how self sufficient they are. They instinctively know how to eat and drink, and are able to run around and explore basically from the end of their first day. You can see two curious chicks less than 24 hours old in our pictures of Welly sitting on her nest.