Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Changing of the Seasons

Fall is here!!!  The temperatures are dropping into the 30's tonight, the oil furnace is kicking on, and the baby has an electric heater in her room.  10 days ago it was 90 degrees and tomorrow it will be in the high 70s.  Fall brings about many changes, changes in the weather, the leaves change color, the winds change direction.  This year it brought about an unexpected change for us, my contract was pulled at Microsoft.  Fortunately I have found a full time position with a decent commute and will start my new job in 2 weeks.

Tonight we had a frost advisory.  Since this wasn't the best season for peppers anyway, I decided to pick all of our ripe sweet peppers and all of the super hots.  Even though the super hots are still green instead of their usual orange or red, they are still very hot.  However, they are not as hot as they should be.  With this batch of peppers, I will combine the super hots with the habaneros.  The pungency is about the same between the ripe habaneros and the immature reapers & scorpions.

Processing our peppers is a labor of love.  I start by slicing the stem off and cutting the peppers in half.  For this step I wear 2 pair of nitrile gloves to keep the capsaicin off of my hands, ESPECIALLY with the super hots (ghost, reapers, and scorpions).  Once sliced, I place them on the dehydrator trays.  For a dehydrator, we have a simple unit that takes up to 10 round trays.  It will dehydrate 10 trays of super hots in 10-12 hours.
Finished tray of hot peppers

Once they are dried, I crush them with a marble mortar and pestle.  Before I begin crushing, I will put on a pair of nitrile gloves and a respirator mask.  Once the peppers are crushed, I put them in a pint sized mason jar for long term storage.

Mortar and Pestle
Dried peppers ready to be crushed
Finished product

Long term storage


Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Dealing With The Weather

We had rain almost every day for month or more, which has led to a near total loss for our tomatoes.  The roma tomatoes are still hanging in there and producing, but all others were rotting almost as soon as they were formed.  I cut the plants down to about 8 inches tall.  I figure there is 2 months of growing left, lets see what will happen, after all, we have nothing to lose at this point.  Talking with the neighboring growers, they have all experienced the same thing.

Our peppers are growing, but not like previous years.  Again, I blame the cool, wet weather.  With days in the 60s and nights in the 40s in the middle of July & August, it's just not the optimal conditions to grow peppers.  My super hots do have lots of peppers on them and look healthier than my sweet peppers, so hopefully we'll be able to sell some.

The cool, wet weather has given us an abundance of pole beans.  We always have a lot of beans, but this year it is going to a whole new level.  I put in less plants than normal, about 50% less, but they have produced 100% more beans so far with 2 more months to go.

1/2 bushel of beans
So far, the pole bean experiment is working well and we will continue to grow pole beans in the future.
  • They are easier to pick;
  • Don't require as much back pain to get to them;
  • Require less seed per pound of beans;
  • And produce extremely well
 In the future though, I may have to figure out a way to support more of the vine.  An 8 foot high support would be great, but would also require a ladder to harvest the beans.  I'm going to experiment next year with an arch and see how that works.

This season has left me with the conclusion that there is no point in complaining or worrying about the weather, but just accept what you get.  When the weather is poor for one type of vegetable, others will thrive.

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Ready for More Buckwheat

I cut the buckwheat down and tilled it in.  I found out that I need to buy a mower for the tractor.  I figured I would try to cut it with the lawn mower.  It knocked the plants down but the deck kept getting clogged and it didn't chop the material as much.  So our next purchase is going to be a 60-72" 3pt mower.

The discs did a decent job of chopping the the buckwheat while incorporating it into the earth, although it took a lot of passes.  Overall, it didn't turn out too bad.

Tilled field of buckwheat
 Now we'll plant another crop of buckwheat to be cut down at the beginning of September.  That will give 6 weeks for the next batch to start to break down before we form beds and plant the garlic.

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Buckwheat in Full Bloom

The buckwheat that I planted has really enjoyed the rain and hot weather.  The plants are 5 feet tall and in full bloom.  It's quite pleasant to look out the window and see a field of white flowers.  I was worried that the aroma from the flowers would be overwhelming, considering how many there are, but they are not at all.  There is a faint fresh smell around the field, but that is it.

Field of Buckwheat
The other day I went down to pick some zucchini, which I planted at the corner of the field, and was amazed at the amount of insect activity.  I didn't realize that there would be as many pollinators attracted to this field, which is only growing buckwheat as green manure for the garlic crop.  Bumblebees, what looked like two distinct types of honey bees, butterflies, and all sorts of other flower loving insects were happily feasting on the pollen of these little flowers.  We are quite pleased with the side effect of helping the local bee population. 

Bee Gathering Pollen

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Processing Carrots

After taking care of the rabbit that was getting into the carrots, I found a young groundhog eating the tops of them.  So, I figured it was time to pick them.  The carrots weren't as big as I was hoping, but anymore time in the ground wasn't going to help them.  There was one that had split open, but all others were fine.

Knowing how much Debbie hates me bringing dirty food into the house to process it, I decided to be a little smarter with my carrots this year.  With 2 wooden crates, a rotating stool, and a bucket of water, I had a very comfortable carrot set up.  The crates we came across at Home Depot on clearance for $4 each (I couldn't make them that cheap); the stool is for a drummer and can be found at any music shop.

Carrot set up

Spring carrot harvest

Our baby enjoyed teething on one of the carrots and we couldn't help but to get some pictures of her

Chickens Eating Eggs

We had a problem with one or more of our chickens eating eggs.  I tried to catch the culprit, but I was unsuccessful.  We had 2 eggs eaten in the nest box and another 4 eaten that were laid in the coop.  All of the eggs except for one had a soft shell, and the eggs in the coop were laid right before dark.  Anyway, after doing some research on the internet, I figured that the nest box was too big.  At one point, there were 3 chickens in there, one laying and the other two harassing her.  So I put a divider in the coop and immediately the we had no more issues.  I was worried that there wouldn't be enough room, but they had plenty of room and seem happy.
Divider in next box
Last Friday I watched one chicken fly out of their run.  The fence is 5 feet high and I didn't think they would be able to get over it.  She drove the other chickens crazy, so I left them all out for the evening.  They couldn't get enough grass.

The next day we were out of town for a family reunion.  I was hoping that the chicken wouldn't fly out again since we wouldn't be around and it was hot day.  Getting home, I checked the coop and sure enough there were only 5 hens.  So I went around the back of the barn to the wood shed and there she was.  I carried her to the coop, gave her water & food, and turned the light on for another hour.  She sounded like she was horse and I'm sure she didn't have water throughout the day, unless she ventured down to the creek to get a drink.

 We got hit with a big heat wave on Monday with temperatures in the 90s and heat index over 100.  I made sure the girls had plenty of fresh water.  Tuesday morning I collected the eggs and all the chickens looked fine.  Tuesday evening when I locked them up there was the hen that had flown out on Saturday laying dead in the nest box.  My assumption is that being out of the run on Saturday put too much stress on her and the heat wave put her over the edge.

In hindsight, I should have put a waterer outside of the coop on Saturday knowing that one of the chickens had flown out the day before.  Needless to say, we are putting chicken wire over the run.

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Curing Onions

I picked all of our onions last week.  About 60% - 70% were fallen over and we had a small window of dry, sunny weather.  The onions were much bigger this year than last, owing to better growing conditions in the spring.  We had about a dozen or so red onions that bolted, likely due to the late frost we had, so we've been using those ones first.  They are now curing and drying in the barn on a drying rack I built last year out of chicken wire an 1x2.  We'll keep them in with the fan blowing until the necks dry shut, which takes anywhere from a couple of days to a couple of weeks, depending on the size of the neck and how long they were in the ground after falling over.
Onions drying
Now we just need some dry weather to harvest our garlic.  It has rained every day for the last 10 days.  Today I had a little help in the garden picking the beets that were ready, some carrots for our salad, and a few peppers for an evening snack (our new favorite snack is crackers with cream cheese and a slice of jalapeno).

Our corn is approximately 6 feet high and is starting to form tassels.  This is my first year growing corn in the square foot garden and so far I am pleased.

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Heat Wave

The temperatures in the high 80s and 90s have really punished the peppers this year.  Last year I had a pepper that was ready to harvest by this time.  This year, I just found the first little sweet pepper.  The plants are also much smaller than the same time last year.  My only explanation is the heat.  It has been 2 weeks with no rain in temperatures in the high 80s and in the 90s this week.  Fortunately there are thunderstorms and lower temperatures coming.  The tomatoes look a lot healthier this year and my corn is chest high already.  In the end, I'm sure it will all work out.  I'm glad I had blog posts for this same time last year.

Blooming Onion

My wife had never seen an onion flower, so when this one bolted, I decided to let it go. It's not too often that we get to see our root plants reproduce.  To this day I've never seen a radish, beet, or carrot bloom and harvest their seeds for a new crop.  I'm thinking about setting aside a section of the garden next year for seed harvest, onion, radish, beet, turnips, and carrots (carrots take two years, so I would save some of my fall carrots for this project).

Onion Bloom

Monday, June 10, 2013

First Egg

I went out today to check on the chickens in between raindrops and I found our first egg. I was so excited I ran back into the house, grabbed my phone, and snapped a picture.  Now Debbie gets to spend some time thinking and looking up new uses for egg. I'm thinking I could get used to having quiche as a regular part of my diet. 


Sunday, June 9, 2013

First Field Plowed

We have been busy the last month.  Unfortunately, our crops took a beating (at least some of the peppers and the radishes).  We had temps in the high 80s the week before Memorial Day, followed by 3 nights of frost over Memorial Day weekend.  The past week has been in the high 80s again.  The radishes did not do well with such extremes, so I harvest all of the 128 that were in the ground for 4 weeks.  We wound up with approximately 50 that were edible. All of the crops look great right now with onions waist high and everything up and ready to grow.


I finished building the cages for the rabbits and almost went and got them before I realized, all I had was the cages.  I still needed the feeders, I had to hang the cages and put in the manure system.  I received the feeders last week and will be finishing everything up this week so that we can hopefully pick up our New Zealand breeders at the end of the week.


I went to purchase a 2 bottom plow up the road, however the guy informed me that he sold them all, but he had a couple 1 bottoms and several 3 bottoms.  I decided on a 3 bottom plow, figuring I could remove on of them and have a whole set of spare parts.  Unfortunately neither of us had realized that it was a category 2 plow, not a category 1.  So I returned it and picked out a 1 bottom plow with a coulter.  Sitting right beside it was a 3pt bedder with a double set of discs on each side.  I exchanged the 3 bottom plow for the 1 bottom and the bedder.

I plowed the first field that we will plant in garlic this fall.  The total size is 100x50, giving ten 100 foot rows.  I had planned on using the bedder to make raised beds, 1 foot wide every 5 feet (the width of my tractor), but to my surprise, the bedder is adjustable out to 2 foot wide beds, essentially doubling the amount of garlic I can plant per bed.  I can't wait to start making beds and see that piece of equipment work.  The plowing went surprisingly easy.  I did have to put the tractor in 4wd but I think if I would get the tires filled with calcium, it wouldn't have been an issue.

After a couple of weeks sitting, I was getting anxious to get a set of discs to finish tilling the field so that I could get a crop or two of buckwheat before fall planting.  Before I traveled to a used tractor dealer to buy a set of discs they had listed, I decided to check craigslist.  I don't look there often and have never bought anything through the site.  I just happened to find a 6 foot Dearborn disc and a 2 bottom plow listed for $200 each.  The guy moved into a new house, was cleaning out the garage, and wanted them gone.  I offered him $300, he accepted, and I was more than happy.  I paid less for a good set of discs AND a 2 bottom plow than I had planned on paying for a set of discs.


I finally got to use the discs on the field.  Being the first field that I've ever worked with a plow and discs, my wife and I are extremely happy with the results.  I may buy a drag harrow to break things up even finer and possibly a sub soiler, but we'll see how things go.  My next purchases will likely be a seeder for planting cover crops and a used manure spreader to spread my compost on the fields.


Look for more frequent updates now that things are finally rolling along.


Monday, May 6, 2013

Spring Work

Unfortunately, we've all been sick the last couple of weeks, bronchitis, flu, ear infection, and severe cold.  Needless to say, the work has slacked.  Finally feeling better and with the great weather we've been having (and forecast to have for the next 10 days), spring work has gone into full gear.

I had a 1 bottom plow given to me and bought another one sight unseen for $20.  Unfortunately, they are both 1 point attachments instead of 3 point.  So I decided to try to convert one of them.  Without going into all of the details, I will just say that it was a failure.  I'll be purchasing a plow at one of the dealers or a local farm this week, both have listings in the paper for used plows and discs.

 We put in 2 types of lettuce, spinach, beets, turnips, and radishes this weekend.  We started with 64 radishes and will continue with a 16-32 rotation.  Beets & turnips, we planted 36 of each.  We don't know if we like beets, my dad does and will gladly take them if we don't.  With the warm weather, I'm going to put beans in this week and attempt sweet corn for the first time in my SFG.  The green beans are moving from a 4x4 box to a 1x10 box with a cattle panel.  We are tired of bending over to pick the bush beans, so we are growing pole beans and using the cattle panel for a trellis. 

The peppers are being hardened off this week, in hopes of transplanting this weekend.  The super hots are doing really well.  Hopefully everything works out and we don't loose any as they are our first profitable product from the "farm".

The chickens seem to be happy in their new home.  I'm still amazed at how much grass they eat.  Here are some pictures of the finished coop painted to match the barn, the run, the man door, and the window which I forgot to put in originally.  I bought the 18x24 single hung window at Lowe's for $32.
Coop and run

Happy chickens


Man door into run



Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Chicken Coop Completed

It is snowing pretty good today with a brisk wind.  Fortunately, I was able to get the chicken coop completed before work.  All it needs now is painted and it can go outside.  The chickens also relocated today to the barn, still in their brooder for a couple more days, until the temps get up.

I trimmed the coop with pine boards.  I had 8' 2x8 boards in the barn when we moved in, so I ripped them at 2.5 inches and was able to get 3 boards out of each one.  In total it required five 8 foot boards.


Trim in progress
 I decided to reinforce all of the doors.  The small doors have 2 sheets of OSB attached to them and the man door has a full 2x3 frame.


For electricity, I put in a ceramic light fixture with a 100 watt bulb.  I also wired up a receptacle so that I could plug a water heater in during the winter.  The receptacle is covered so the chickens can't get to it and all of the wire is in conduit.




In thinking about design and security for the chicken door, I went through several different ideas before coming to the finished product.  The chicken door hinges from the top and has a barrel latch on the inside.  To open/close the door, we will first have to open the "man" door, but that also gives us a chance to see how the conditions inside the coop are on a daily basis.





















I was hoping to plant some cool weather crops today, but it looks like it will have to wait until later in the week.  Turnips, beets, radishes, lettuce, spinach, and onions are all going in the ground.  The peppers seedlings look great.  I think I'll take them out of their mini-greenhouse by the weekend.  According to the weather forecast, spring is only a couple of days away.  I know we can't wait.



Monday, March 25, 2013

Firewood 101

Sitting here, the last week of March, watching a snowstorm dump inches of white stuff while the thermometer sits at 32 degrees, I can't help but think about firewood.  I'm wondering if we have enough to finish heating the house through a cold April, how long the supply inside the house will last, and when I need to refill the wood furnace.  I don't want to dissuade anyone from homesteading or moving to the country, but I think a lot of books & magazines diminish the amount of work that is required just to heat your house.

Let me start by saying, I love heating with wood and so does my family.  Most years we have a constant fire going for roughly 6 months a year, from mid-October until mid-April.  Our house is a 200+ year old farm house, around 2600 sq.ft., and we are able to keep it at a consistent 71 degrees.  Because our wood furnace is in the basement, our floors are warm all winter, which makes the hardwood floors much nicer to walk on.  Where we live the options for heat are: heating oil, propane, electric, geo-thermal, or wood.  Our house had/has an oil furnace and we didn't want to buy a new furnace since ours was technically fine, it was just expensive to use, so we opted for wood.  Even if we had natural gas available, we would still heat our house with wood most of the time, opting for gas during the late fall/early spring times when it is difficult to keep the house from getting to hot with the fire.

So lets assume you decide to move to the country, grow your own organic vegetables, raise some animals, and heat your house with wood.  The cheapest way to heat with wood is to cut your own.  Your goal for the first year is to cut enough wood for 2 or 3 years, that way in subsequent years, you will always be burning at least 2 year old wood that is well seasoned. Your first winter will tell you roughly how much wood you need each year and chances are you will underestimate by a cord or two. (in case you don't know, a cord of wood is a stack of wood, 4 feet high, 4 feet deep, and 8 feet long)  We burn roughly 8 cords of wood a year, so my wood shed is built to hold 16 cords, that way I always have 2 years of dry seasoned wood.

First thing that you need is a place to cut your wood.  If you don't own land that is wooded, then you will have to find places to cut.  I drive around with my chainsaw in the truck after strong storms, cutting up downed trees & branches for people whenever I see them.  You can also usually find local landowners that will allow you to cut on their property.  Sometimes the deal is only for trees that are dead or already down, or you may get lucky and be allowed to cut anything and actually manage their woodlot for them.  Either way, if you are moving to a new area and don't have your own wooded property, finding wood can be a challenge.

Once you've established a place to cut, now you need to get the wood out and to wherever your are storing it.  In the spring, I will try to cut & haul out 5 truck loads a week until it gets too hot to cut.  cutting the wood is easy, the chainsaw basically does all the work.  Once its cut though, the real work starts.  You will handle each log several times before it's actually burnt: carrying to the truck, unloading, splitting, stacking, carrying to the house, and finally putting it into the furnace.

After you have the wood hauled out of the woods, the next thing is to split it into pieces that will fit in your furnace.  I used to split by hand but after doing that for enough years, I broke down and bought a hydraulic splitter.  I always like how the movies portray the country guy out back splitting wood.  It seems like a very pleasant task and at first, you won't mind doing it.  But when you are looking at splitting 8 or more cords a year, it gets old fast.  What you don't see is the bigger logs where you swing a heavy maul over & over or use a wedge & sledge hammer to split them open, or nasty knots that stop all progress.  When you split your wood, you should end up with 3 sizes of pieces, not counting kindling.  You'll have some smaller pieces, useful for getting the fire going in the mornings or any time it has died down; your average sized pieces, what most people picture when they think of firewood, which is your most used source of fuel; and your large, long burning pieces, used to keep the fire going all night or times you are away from home for long periods.  We have a 15-60-25 ratio of small-average-large sized pieces.

Now you have your wood cut & split, it's time to stack it so that it dries.  We built a 48x8 lean-to on the side of the barn last year to store our firewood.  Prior to that, we stacked it out in the open and covered it with tarps.  If you do cover it with a tarp, make sure that air can still get underneath the tarp, otherwise you are locking in all that moisture.  When you stack your wood, you will want to make sure you have a good mix of small, medium, and large pieces throughout your stack, since you will be burning some of each every day.  Even when we bring wood into the house (which we keep stocked with several days of wood), we make sure that smaller stack has about the same ratio.

 Remember, you are cutting, hauling, splitting, and stacking during the spring/early summer, the same time of year when you will be planting your garden.  There will be days you wake up planning on doing firewood, but the garden will need watered, weeded, harvested, etc., so the firewood will be put on hold until that is done. 

It's starting to get cold and it's time to get wood into the house.  We have a wood room that can hold 4-6 weeks of wood, which is nice, except that it will take the better part of a day getting it stocked, and once winter is here, we generally bring in 1 week of wood at a time.  You will need a mechanism to transport the wood to your house.  We use a 4-wheeler with a heavy duty cart that we purchased at Tractor Supply attached.  The cart is rated for 1200 lbs and has large enough tires that I can take it across the creek and into the woods if needed.  The one thing about wood heat is when you are out of wood in the house, regardless of how cold, wet, windy, snowy, or late it is, you will have to go out and get wood.  This transporting of wood from wood shed to house goes on from the time you start burning in the fall until you are done in the spring.  People have asked why we don't store more wood in the basement, and it's an easy answer .... BUGS!  Wood will have bugs, either inside, under the bark, or just on it.  My house is warm enough to make the bugs active and I don't want to bring them all inside for a party.

Before you are done burning the last fire in the spring, you will start cutting again for the next year, and the cycle continues.  Again, not to dissuade anyone, but you will likely be handling wood 9 or more months out of the year, only getting a break during the hottest months.  But we love heating our house with wood.  The heat is consistent and always on.  A normal furnace heats the room up, turns off when the thermostat hits the key temperature, then cools down until the thermostat kicks in again.  So you have constant highs & lows.  We have noticed that 67 degrees with wood feels a lot warmer than 67 degrees with the furnace.  The conclusion I've come to is 2-fold, 1) the floor is warm because of the radiant heat coming off the wood furnace; 2) there are no dips in the temperature when the thermostat kicks off, so it's a constant 67 degrees.

I hope that I've shed some light on the amount of work required to heat your house with wood.  It is a lot of work, but it is also very rewarding.

Friday, March 22, 2013

Hot Peppers Started

As part of our farming business plan we are going to sell dried, crushed super hot peppers.  The last several years I've grown, dried, and crushed habanero peppers for personal use (although I have enough to last several lifetimes).  I was buying supplies to give out some of the pepper for Christmas gifts (sidenote, we give out baskets filled with stuffed we've canned, dried, frozen from our garden for Christmas) and the woman asked if I was interested in selling it in her store.  That got me thinking about how I wanted to grow super hot peppers, grow food for other people, and eventually make a profit from the farm.  We aren't planning on making a lot of money from the peppers, but if they can at least show a profit on year 1 and we can sell all of our product, then we will expand in future years.  Our whole plan is take it slow and see how it goes.

Anyway, I bought pepper seeds from Pepper Joe's and set out to establish our farm as one of the few suppliers of crushed, dried super hot peppers.  We bought and used leftover seeds from last year of the following:
Carolina Reaper - 1.4 million SHU
Butch T Trinidad Scorpion - 1million SHU
Bhut Jolokia (Ghost Chili) - 900,000 SHU
Habanero - 200,000 SHU

We also have hot, but not super hot:
Giant Jalapeno, Black jalapeno, Pablano, Sporo, Cayenne, Golden Nugget, Firecracker

Most of them have sprouted in the last week and have overgrown their dome.  As you can see by the color of the cells, the dome ends up getting more moisture to the end cells and less to the middle, which had the effect of the end cells sprouting at a much faster and higher rate.
Peppers Sprouting
Now I just need to find a better way to crush the peppers when they finally arrive.  Mortar and pestle just won't cut it for the quantity of peppers that will need to be crushed this year vs previous years.

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

New Tractor

We got a new tractor, a Kubota L3200 4x4 with front loader.  It is 2x the size of our old tractor and can lift 3x the weight with the loader.  Our old tractor also had turf tires, so the R1 tires are a big plus.  The rear work lights have been really useful and have extended my hours splitting/hauling wood.  We paid extra for the 66" bucket with quick release, which allows the loader arms to use skid loader attachments.  The only downfall is that I have to rebuild my compost bins since they are built for my old bucket which was 54".

Now I just have to find a used set of disc harrows and a 3pt moldboard plow.  I should be able to get both of those at an upcoming auction.  1 step closer to commercial garlic growing.

New tractor bringing wood to the house


Coop Almost Finished



It's been a couple of weeks, but the coop is almost finished.  Between the cold evenings, busy weekends, and being sick, things just haven't got done as fast as we would like.  Anyway, here are some pictures of the coop in progress.

Tractor picking up coop
I forgot to start the coop by building it on legs, so after I got some of the walls covered and it felt sturdy, I put the forks on the tractor and picked it up.  I also wanted to make sure the tractor could pick up the coop, since I will need to move it out of the barn.
 
View of interior
The egg box is built on the side of the coop.  It is 22"x12" and the roof goes from 12" to 16", giving a 4-12 pitch.  I should have grabbed a picture before the siding went on, but if you look at the picture above, you will see that the shingles and the roof extend inside the coop a couple of inches.  I wanted to make sure that I wasn't going to have any leaks, and trying to keep the cost down, this wound up working out really well.
Egg box
Now we just need some warm weather and the chickens are just about ready to head to their new home. I added a roost bar for them to hang out on since they were jumping on top of their waterer. 


I used some scrap pine from the trim of the coop.  The legs are 4 inches long, the roost is 24 inches, and the leg supports are 4 inches.  A couple of them are starting to sleep on it at night.  We are all enjoying watching the chicks grow and get their colors.  It's funny, the pecking order was established almost on day one and the light colored bird on the left of the roost has established herself as the queen bird.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Chicken Coop

The chicken coop is almost done.  Here are some pictures of the framing done.  The coop is 4x4 with the ceiling going from 4' up to 5'4".  I have 2 walls, the roof, and the laying box, which is off the left side.  I'll get those uploaded tomorrow.

The framing is all 2x3.  The floor and roof is 7/16" OSB.  I still need to decide if I will insulate it or not and if I will cover the walls inside.  I've been contemplating covering the walls/floor/ceiling with some type of plastic, kind of like a bathtub surround, to make it easier to clean.  There is still a ways to go.  I'm going to wire it up with one light and possibly an outlet to plug a water heater in the winter time.

Floor Frame Floor
Walls & Roof Frame Isometric Front

Thursday, February 21, 2013

A new year and new projects

We've decided to get a couple laying hens.  Our plan is to buy 3 hens that are already laying, then get 3 chicks during Chick Days at Tractor Supply to replace the older hens.  That being said, last night I started construction of the chicken coop.

After looking at dozens of plans, pre-built coops, and kits, I decided to design my own.  Our coop is 4'x4' with a roof that goes from 5'4" to 4' (16 inches of drop in 4 feet = 4-12 pitch).  The coop will be raised off the ground 16 inches on 4x4 stilts, allowing the chickens to have that 16 sq.ft. of shade as part of the run.  The whole run will be approximately 20x5 or 100 sq.ft.  The laying boxes will stick out from the main coop for easy external access.  That will also allow my wife & kids to harvest the eggs without having to enter the run or the coop.

Last night I got the floor done, the short wall and high wall, and the rafters on.  Tonight my goal is to have all of the framing done and ready for sides.  Our goal is to be ready to pick up our hens and rabbits in 2 weeks and the pigs shortly after.  So with so many new projects, hens, rabbits, pigs, commercial garlic growing, it should be a more exciting blog this year.