Author: Anna & Mark

Waters for chicks ducks turkeys guineas and more

Guinea keet waterer

Duck watererRemember Heath’s
video of his guinea keats drinking
?  He took some stunning
still shots that won first prize in our “Chicks, peacocks, and more”
category of the
photo
contest
.  It
was hard to decide which we liked best, but we finally settled on the
image at the top of this post, with the photo to the left of his
ducklings and the one below of his keets as close followers.



Guinea keets

Chick watererSecond prize went to Soosan
Kirbawy for this adorable image of a mother hen with her chicks. 
Soosan wrote:



“I had no expectation that my chicks would
figure this out!  But I’m thrilled, because ‘mom’ kept scratching
dirt etc. into the low chick waterer. Thanks!”



We agree, Tara — using
our
chicken waterer makes chick
care much more worry-free.  We’ve also had reports from customers
who use our waterers with turkeys, geese, quail, and pigeons.  I’d be curious to hear
from readers who have tried out other birds with good results.

Artistic chicken photos

Rooster waterer

Chicken bucket watererThe response to our photo
contest
was
overwhelming, and we wished we could have given out yet more
prizes.  This week, I’m going to showcase the winners, along with
several runners-up whose entries were too good not to share.




Carolyn Neuharth won
first prize in the artistic chickens category —
I
wrote about her operation (and posted her photos) previously
.  Second place went to
Susan Palmer for the closeup at the top of the page, showing her
rooster drinking from a simple DIY waterer.




If we had a few more
prizes to award in this category, the next one would have gone to Vance
Foster, who snapped the elegant shot to the right of his happy chickens.



Homemade chicken waterer

And Tara Sparlin
probably would have won a prize for the photo above if it hadn’t come
in a day late (but definitely not a dollar short!)  That’s one
healthy-looking chicken.



Chickens in love

I also really enjoyed
this entry of Tara’s — those chickens look quite fond of each other.




Next year, we may have
to expand the prize selection yet again.  Meanwhile, stay tuned to
see the winning photos in the other two categories, which are equally
striking.



All of the waterers on this
page were made using our
DIY chicken waterer
kits
.

No-till pasture improvement techniques

Chickens in the weedsI recently posted a followup
on our
experimental
trees and shrubs
in
the chicken pastures, but how about the grasses, clovers, and forbs
we’ve been planting?  After a lot of reading, last fall I decided
that I wanted to experiment with planting white and red clover,
alfalfa, and Kentucky bluegrass in three different pastures, and I can
see the results of my plantings now.  As usual, I made a lot of
mistakes, but did have some success.




In the first pasture, I seeded
alfalfa, clover, and bluegrass all mixed together, along with oats and
Austrian winter peas

That was a mistake — the cover crops shaded out the smaller perennial
seedlings and I ended up with few living plants once the former died
back over the winter.  Note to self: ignore websites that say oats
are a good nurse crop for clover, or perhaps toss the clover on top of
the rotting oats in late winter so the legumes don’t germinate until
spring.



Cutting perennial weeds

Next, I set aside part
of another pasture to experiment with a pure stand of alfalfa. 
Here, the problem was that there were too many perennial weeds still
living in the soil, even though the chickens had scratched the surface
bare for me.  The perennials grew faster than the alfalfa, and
even though I tried to scythe the former without cutting the latter,
the patch turned so weedy this summer that my husband mowed it all
down.  Note to self: next time, spend a year killing out perennial
weeds before planting alfalfa.  (Actually,
the
pasture I’m currently sending through wave after wave of cover crops
should do the trick.)


Young stand of clover

The only successful
seeding was a mixture of white clover and Kentucky bluegrass, planted
into a third pasture at the beginning of February.  This was the
pasture that was wild until late summer, then
we
cut down the shrubs and let the chickens scratch up the weeds
, and finally we
planted a cover crop of oats and winter peas
along with some Crucifers in the chicken pasturemustard and oilseed
radishes.  I scattered the clover and bluegrass seeds onto the
bare ground left behind by the winter-killed crucifers, and the
perennials have done well (although the grass didn’t like the
drought).  I’ve only been letting the chickens graze this pasture
a little bit this summer since I don’t want them to scratch up the
young perennials, but by next year, I hope to have a good stand of
chicken-friendly plants there.




My conclusion is that
it’s entirely possible to start a new pasture using chemical-free,
no-till methods, but that there’s a lot of trial and error
involved.  Luckily, chickens are very resilient and tell me that
any pasture is better than no pasture, so my experiments don’t seem to
have hurt them any.



Our chicken waterer lets you leave home for a
long weekend without finding a chicken sitter.