Trapping crayfish for chickens

how to make a do it yourself crayfish trap

Do you have a creek or river
within walking distance from your chicken coop?




I just found out one of our chickens
likes to eat mature crayfish
. My next thought was to get
curious about how easy it might be to harvest them from our creek?




The traps are easy to make,
and some people even use plastic soda or juice bottles. Dead fish seem
to make good bait and it helps if it’s attached near the top.




My experiment will be to see
how much time and effort it takes to harvest this new source of protien
for our flock. Image credit goes to
Fridley
Farmer
.

Mulberry rooting and other forest pasture experiments

Comfrey giftFirst, a bit of book-keeping.  I never heard back from Julie Keith, our Bocking 4 comfrey winner
Julie, if you’re still out there, please drop me an email with your
mailing address.  And, just in case Julie doesn’t come through in
the next couple of days, I chose a runner-up.  Daniel, please email
info@avianaquamiser.com with your contact information, and if Julie remains MIA, I’ll mail you the comfrey starts instead.



As a second book-keeping
note, a huge thank you to a second Julie, who sent me the Bocking 14
start shown to the left.  This comfrey will go in my fence-line bed
next-door to the Bocking 4, and in a year I’ll put some in the pasture
for a chicken taste-test (and will give some away).  The plant may
look scruffy now, but I’m confident it will take off like all of our
other comfreys once warm weather hits.



Failed hardwood cuttings

Grafting mulberriesOkay,
book-keeping aside, I figured this would be a good opportunity to take a
look at some of my forest-pasture-perennial experiments from last
year.  The first was a total dud.  I
stuck dozens of Illinois everbearing mulberry hardwood cuttings in the ground in a nursery bed (and a few in a pot on the porch), hoping that at least one or two would
root.  Some did seem to be taking hold during our wet summer, but
by the time fall rolled around, all had perished.  I dug the last
sticks out of the ground last week and none had developed roots, so it
looks like Illinois everbearing mulberries aren’t going to be added to
my list of easy-to-root plants.




On the other hand, I sent some scionwood to a reader last winter, and he had great luck grafting onto wild red mulberries
I don’t have quite as easy of a source of red mulberry seedlings, so I
might try starting some mulberry rootstock from seeds from our Illinois
everbearing tree this coming summer.  My conclusion is — if you
want to propagate mulberries, it’s best to go the grafting route.



American persimmon seedling

Next stop is our seedling persimmons,
now a year and a half old.  These seem to be growing slowly but
surely in the pasture, perhaps because they don’t tend to get any care
during the year, but also possibly because American persimmon is just a
slow grower.  The trees are now about two feet tall, and I’m
hopeful they’ll double in size over the next year so I can graft some
Asian persimmons onto the rootstock in late winter 2015.

What’s next in forest-pasture experimentation for the coming year?  We’ll mostly be focusing on our newest pasture, where I recently set out the first pear tree and planted comfrey along the fences
Another experiment will involve a taste test between the Bocking 4
comfrey that will be added to the pasture this year and the common
comfrey that’s already there to discover which is more palatable to our
flock.  Stay tuned to learn the answer!

Enter our silkworm egg giveaway

Nearly mature silkworms

Last summer, I tried
raising silkworms to feed our chickens.  My project had growing
pains, for reasons I’ll explain below, but I think the idea still has
lots of merit. 
So I’ll be giving Silkworm cocoonaway 100+ silkworm eggs to one lucky reader this week! 
These are so-called “peace silkworms” that are able to break free of
their cocoons as adults and breed naturally, so you can keep your
silkworms going if you like the project.  The caterpillars are
great food for your chickens, and their cocoons can be used to make silk
cloth (with caveats).  To enter, just leave your comment below before midnight on Thursday, December 12, and
be sure to check back next week to find out if you won.  I’ll use a random-number generator to select one lucky winner.



If you want to learn more about silkworms before entering, here are my the highlights of my experience over the past year:

You should also know that I
started out the experiment very enthusiastically, but by the end decided
I wasn’t going to raise silkworms again soon.  So I figured it
might help to hear the scenario in which I think it’s worthwhile to
raise silkworms for your chickens.

Heat was a big problem for
me since I don’t use air-conditioning and silkworms suffer when it gets
above about 80 inside.  If you do Harvesting mulberry leavesair-condition,
or have a cool basement, this would be a non-issue.  However, I do
recommend keeping your silkworms somewhere other than your living room
since they start to smell a bit after the first couple of weeks.

The other big problem
we had was collecting enough leaves for the voracious worms as they grew
larger.  Our young mulberry tree was no match for their appetite,
but if you have a mature tree, you’ll be fine.  You’ll be even
finer if you have an interested kid or two who’d like to collect
mulberry leaves and play with caterpillars multiple times a day.

I hope you try
silkworms next year and report back with your results so I’ll hear more
about when silkworms do and don’t make sense on the homestead.  And
the cheapest way to experiment is to win our giveaway, so be sure to
enter below!