Latestarter's ramblings/musings/gripes and grumbles.

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Alaskan

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I know you said no waterfowl. ..but geese are great eaters of grass. They will get almost all of their feed from grass, so very economical.

Just sayin' ;)


Or course sheep will also help with the grass, but I love roasted goose more than I love lamb. :hu
 

Mike CHS

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I was happy to show Teresa that I'm not the only one to clean and tape up wounds. I sliced open my thigh just above the knee down to the bone while moving and since I still had a truck to unload did the same with that one. :)

The forum isn't the same without your input so I'm glad to see you are well.
 

Pastor Dave

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I pray your back heals up. The finger should do fine. When it gets reattached well enough, some soaking in warm water and Epsom salt should be good.

@Mike CHS you are quite a trooper. A finger nearly cut off is critical. Cutting your thigh to the bone could be fatal. Good thing you did not hit the femoral artery.
 

Latestarter

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So my goats aren't really sure exactly what to do with high quality hay... :he Today I went and bought 6 bales of Orchard/Alfalfa (~25/75%) shipped here from NM, to replace the old hay that was still left. It was twice the cost of local hay, but figured I'd give it a try. Man does the new stuff smell sweet! Love that smell. :love That and fresh cut grass smell. The smell of fresh turned good quality dirt is pretty decent as well. The ground under the compost pile and under the pallets where the old hay had been stacked smells (& looks) really rich. Might just force me into planting a garden next spring... We'll see how ambitious I become. :hide

The old hay will be used for bedding for them and the rest will be discarded somewhere in the back 40. I think goats are the original "grass is greener" animals. :hu I cut the bale wires on one and placed several flakes in their feeder and they proceed to stand on the fence and eat directly from the bales in the stack... So they're stretched out through the fence and over the top of the pallets (placed vertically to block them from doing exactly this) to munch directly from the bales... :th They've been getting a lot of branches lately as well since I've been clearing property lines and mowing tracks of overhanging brush.

On the way back home I swung into a McDonald's for a sweet tea. So I'm sitting in the line waiting to pay and I see a snake slither out of the landscaping stone and under the car ahead of me. There was water runoff there and I think it was trying to get a drink. So anyway, when the car ahead moved (it didn't run it over) I got out and persuaded it back into the gravel so it wouldn't get run over. It wasn't poisonous, and most fast food places have mice problems, so figured it was better left alive. It wasn't a big snake... maybe 18"-2' long.

In other news, I finally got the front pasture completely mowed. Hopefully only one more time before it goes dormant. I'm going to need a pull behind sprayer for the mower so I can spray for weeds. Too much area to try and cover with one of those 2 gallon hand held pump types. Also have started pricing out/trying to locate used utility poles for a pole barn spine, or dimensional lumber, or a prefab barn structure. Time will tell. What and how depends on total cost.
 

CntryBoy777

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I've been thru the same quandry with hay here and have determined that our goats just don't prefer it, but will nibble on it during rainy days inside the house. We have had them for 2yrs this past July and in that length of time they may, may have eaten a total of a couple of bales. I keep it for them, but their old hay is cycled to duck bedding and replaced with a fresh bale. The cooler temps have slowed the grass down some here and I certainly am thankful. Really good to hear from ya, but figured ya had been busy....but ya are missed, along with your regular comments and banter....:)
 

Mini Horses

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My herd of does LOVE the high quality grass -- seems it is nice to sleep on!! :he Because of that, I must put only what I think they will eat at a meal. I use alfalfa pellets &/or cubes (if I can get the brands that have less of the stuff that makes the m hard). on the milk stand or fed in feed bunkers.

Mine eat the hay when grass & browse is gone, not much before that. Have heart, they do like the stuff but, YES everything is "greener on the other side". It's to drive us crazy!! :lol:

Glad you are able to get something done. Also working alone, I know just how gratifying and difficult it is. Always seems that something interrupts our plans. Glad you posted.
 

Hens and Roos

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our goats can get picky about the hay that is fed....Amelia is the one who is most selective of what she eats...prefers the grassy type hay and no grain at this point.
 

Bruce

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Perhaps goats, being browsers, don't really want the "high test" alfalfa?? Maybe it is too rich for them. Not supposed to feed that to alpacas, in fact they are better off with second cut orchard grass hay. One site I found shows alfalfa at 15% minimum protein, orchard grass at 7% minimum.

I cut the bale wires on one and placed several flakes in their feeder and they proceed to stand on the fence and eat directly from the bales in the stack
:lol:

Actually, Laddie was doing that with hay he could just barely reach through the 2x4 wire in the corner of the "extra" coop from where the gate strikes that wall. Never mind that the stuff in their wall feeder came off the same bale. I later decided that I didn't really need the younger chickens messing in that hay (*) and given the stall door in the alpacas' area is always closed (**) I would put the "on deck" bale or 3 in there instead. Easier to get a flake or 2 to the feeder without having to open the gate while carrying the hay. I bet if I opened the stall door, took some hay off, put it in the feeder and left the door open, they'd go eat off the bales just like your goats.

* as at that point they were in that coop at night until I let them out in the morning
** since the one time they got trapped in the barn they pooped and peed in it and went back again after I'd cleaned it up
 
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