Ground egg shells for the girls

As Dandelion has been laying thin shelled eggs I thought I would feed the girl’s egg shells back to them to boost their calcium. They have grit and crushed oyster shell in a hopper that they can help themselves to at any time but this will give them a bit of extra calcium.

I put the broken egg shells on parchment paper in a tray and then in to the oven on low for about half an hour. It is really just to dry the egg shells out so that they will crush easily.

Eggs shells straight from the oven

I then crush the egg shells with a pestle and mortar and then mix them into a dish of mash. I know that the girls love a dish of mash and it means that they are getting a healthy treat as it’s their normal pellets mixed with water and then the egg shells added.

Egg shells ground up

Egg shells mixed with mash

Five little girls round the dish

I love the way the bigger girls seem to take on a parental role and allow the little girls to have their share rather than any chasing away.

They enjoy a treat that is good for them

They love this and they all got a share of it. By the end of the day the dish was empty. This means they have all had their extra helping of calcium. Even if it doesn’t help, it won’t do any harm so there is nothing to lose by giving them this and I know that they have enjoyed it.

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Our little eggs

We only have Freckles and Apricot laying at the moment and they are both laying on the same day, every other day. Today I found their eggs side by side in the nest box. It’s a bit tricky telling which one is which, not!

Our little eggs

Every time I see them side by side it makes me smile.

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A sunny bank holiday

This August bank holiday, which is the last bank holiday of the year, has been a lovely sunny one. Usually as soon as a bank holiday comes around it rains. This time we had some rain during the week and the best of the sun on Sunday and Monday.

The sun really had an effect on the garden.

The sun is working it’s magic

The tomatoes are ripening

We are now picking plenty

This shrub is laden with berries

I have enjoyed spending time in the garden in the sun and the chooks have done plenty of dust bathing and sitting in the sun too.

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A comparison of egg sizes

After I wrote yesterday’s post Freckles laid an egg. She is our best egg layer. We then had to buy some shop eggs as a catering customer had requested a plain, sliced egg, sandwich.

I know I have done comparisons before but I thought I would take the opportunity to compare a medium sized, standard girl’s, egg with Freckles and Apricot’s eggs.

Egg size comparison

Medium, shop bought, egg on the left, Freckles egg in the middle and Apricot’s tiny egg on the right.

Tiny but perfect!

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Three, almost free meals, on Sunday

For Sunday breakfast we had bacon and eggs with the last of the little girl’s eggs. There has been a slow down at the moment as Rusty is moulting and not laying, Cinnamon had her second, one day broody spell, and last time this happened she stopped for a week, Dandelion’s recent eggs have been broken and Apricot had taken a break after briefly going broody. This meant it had been down to Freckles to keep us going. I decided to use all the eggs between the two of us.

We had all five eggs for breakfast

The two oval shaped eggs on the left were Cinnamon’s last two eggs before she took a break and the three round eggs are Freckles.

For lunch we had a ham and tomato sandwich with tomatoes from the garden. For Sunday dinner I had some sliced pork and gravy in the freezer from a previous Sunday roast. For only two of us, there is always to much meat no matter how small a joint I buy, so I make double the gravy and freeze half and freeze half the meat for another day.

The veg we had for Sunday dinner

I roasted the last of the early potatoes and a courgette and we had the first proper helping of runner beans. The runner beans are late this year but as the dwarf beans have recently finished and now the runner beans have got started this has actually worked out quite well. The runner beans should continue until the first frosts.

After we had eaten the breakfast eggs Apricot laid her first egg after a ten day break. Her eggs are really tiny but as we had eaten all the eggs there were no other eggs to compare it to. Instead I thought I would compare it to a strawberry as her eggs are also a similar shape to a strawberry.

Apricot’s egg

Strawberry egg

Apricot’s eggs are tiny

They may be tiny but at least it means we now have two girls laying. It was very satisfying to have three meals made up from our own produce.

There are loads more courgettes coming and lots of tomatoes now ripening. We are heading for the moment when we have a glut and I may have to cook courgettes and tomatoes together for the freezer. They can then be added to future dishes. I am not complaining as this is the best year for the veg plot for many years. Long may it continue.

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A broken egg and some yogurt for the girls

Dandelion has been laying thin shelled eggs right from when she started laying. She is clueless about laying and right from the start she would sit in a nest box then lay an egg in the run or lay an egg in the run then sit in the nest box. Sometimes she sits in the nest box then lays the egg the following day. Occasionally her egg will be in a nest box and sometimes it will be in the chicken shed.

Her last three eggs have been broken. The first was laid in the run and had been broken and eaten. The next two were laid first thing in the morning in the chicken shed. They had both been broken but not eaten. They were broken side up which leads me to wonder if they have been pecked. I think perhaps they were pecked and then the automatic door opened and the girls abandoned the egg in the rush to get outside.

I am only speculating as I can’t be sure but below is the egg facing the way that I found it.

Dandelion’s egg

I squeezed the egg shell and it is thin but I don’t think it would have broken on it’s own. The next time we have eggs I might dry some shells in the oven, crush them and add them to some mash. Dandelion has always laid thin shelled eggs but she doesn’t seem to suffer when laying.

Amber, our bantam vorwerk, always struggled with egg laying. She would lay thin shelled or soft shelled eggs and always looked poorly before laying. Luckily she didn’t lay often. I tried giving her crushed egg shells, limestone powder and cod liver oil, but nothing made a difference so I am not convinced that this can be changed.

The good thing is that unlike Amber, Dandelion looks healthy and happy and doesn’t struggle with egg laying at all. In fact she seems unaware that she has laid an egg most of the time and will sit in the nest box afterwards for a while and then give up.

I decided to scramble the egg and give it back to the girls rather than waste it. I scramble it in a little olive oil and water. I was also about to give the girls a treat of probiotic yogurt. This is good for their digestion system but must only be given in small amounts, about a teaspoon per hen and only occasionally. It shouldn’t be given more than once a week and in fact I give it about once a month. As the egg was only a tiny amount I mixed it with the yogurt and put it in four little dishes.

I give the girls some yogurt

The girls are loving the yogurt

Apricot has a yogurt beak

Emerald is splattered with specks of yogurt

We had to go out for a few hours and when we returned all the dishes were empty and Emerald looked clean once more. I am never sure how she manages to get clean but she never has the specks of yogurt on her feathers for long.

I think the girls enjoyed their treat.

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Some fun for the girls

We pruned the shrub that grows in the chicken run as it had grown through the weld mesh and was looking a bit odd. The girls like to reach up from the branch perch and peck at the leaves so we thought we would put the pruned bits in the run for them. They had a great time pecking at the leaves.

Some pruned branches for the girls

Rusty still has a clean and fluffy bottom

Cinnamon is too busy in a dust bath to join in

After I had given the girls a pot of growing leaves, to decimate, I thought that there would be nothing to lose from seeing if they would regrow.

The girls greens are regrowing

I am pleased to see that they are regrowing. I think the girls will have some more fun with these at a later date.

The shrub that they are enjoying has also grown huge on the inside of the run. I have decided that I will prune that part at a later date so that they can enjoy the pruned branches again on another day. It is good to get maximum fun for the girls from the greenery.

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The tomatoes are ripening at last

We have had the best crop of tomatoes for many years. They are abundant but, due to a lack of sun, have been taking ages to ripen. I have been taking a few indoors and keeping them in a cool, dark, cupboard to ripen. They have ripened at the rate of one a day which is great as we have one between us in our lunchtime sandwich.

Since the monster tree next door has been cut back the veg plot is now getting a lot more light. Suddenly the tomatoes have started to ripen on the plant.

The first plant has ripening tomatoes

We have already eaten quite a few from this plant. The first ones I ripened indoors but the last few we have eaten straight from the plant. They are really good tomatoes.

The second plant is ripening

These have been slower and we haven’t eaten any from this plant yet. That’s not a bad thing though as it stops them all coming at once.

Giant tomatoes

Even the giant tomatoes have finally got going. This was an experiment but I don’t think that I would grow these again. Although the tomatoes are big there are far fewer of them and they take a lot longer to grow.

The forecasters are saying that we may be in for an Indian summer this year. I really hope so because that would give us a good chance of getting the most out of our veg plot. Also I love the sun and would love some late sun in the garden. Here’s hoping!

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Tweaking the veg plot

Our broad bean plants were finished and looked ugly but we didn’t want to remove them and leave the space empty. As soon as there is an empty space the neighbourhood cats use it as a toilet. In fact they often use our garden as a toilet, even when it is planted, but we don’t want to make it easy for them.

On a trip to the garden centre we found a box of mixed salad leaves at a reasonable price. Even if they don’t come to much they could be given to the chickens.

Spent broad bean plants looking rather ugly

I have planted a salad leaf patch

It looks a bit pathetic at the moment but it’s better than an empty space and better than the dead broad beans. I will update when they have grown a bit.

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The last of the early potatoes

I have just dug up the last early potato plant. I was amazed to find a couple of huge potatoes.

The last early potato plant is dug up

We have had some really good sized potatoes from these plants

I think that due to a very wet July and August this year we have had the best potatoes, tomatoes and courgettes for many years. I think the rain swells the potatoes giving us some large ones and it stops the tomatoes getting blight and the courgettes getting rot. This happens when there is dry weather followed by wet or wet weather followed by dry. Consistent rainfall seems to have helped this year.

These potatoes make great roast potatoes and great chips. As we had a couple of giant ones I used them to make chips. The rest will be roasted at the weekend.

Once these have run out the fir apples should be ready giving us a steady supply of potatoes. This is definitely the best year for many years for us.

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