It is all about living in the country, and by country I mean rural America.
Rural America. That covers a lot of ground and our little share of rural America is in the deep south. I write today about some of the things we, down here, talk to each other about daily life and goings on. This is definitely not a "how to" on being country or living in a rural area. I could go into great detail about that subject, but I won't. As I write, I don't intend for this to be a lengthy post, just some ramblings about things I have seen and done in the past few days. After all, that is what we talk to our family, our neighbors, and our friends about every day.
It is important to remember the weather dictates what we do and when we do it to take care of our outdoor animals. If it is hot we make preparations for our animals to endure the heat. If it is cold we try to keep them comfortable, dry, and provide them with shelter that keeps that in mind. It has been colder than a witch's tit the past few days so we have had to do extra work to keep them safe and warm. I guess it isn't really extra work when it is a labor of love.
A winter storm blew down from the north early in the week and snow fell as far south as Florida. The cold enveloped an area from the midwest down to central Florida. We didn't get snow where we live like the folks south of us did, but we did get temperatures in the lower teens (F) with chill factors in the single digits in the early morning hours a couple of mornings. We simply are not accustomed to temperatures that cold even in January and February which are traditionally our coldest months. What does this mean for us who have livestock of that stay outdoors? It means you have to first keep their water from freezing. You have to keep them as dry and warm as you can, and you try to adjust their feed whenever possible to keep them strong and healthy.
The four-legged livestock requires a good deal of water so we have to keep their trough free of ice and filled so they have plenty to drink throughout the cold weather. That means venturing out in the cold a couple of times a day to clear the trough of ice and fill it so they won't run out of water. While I do this I provide them with more hay than usual so they will stay in the barn and out of the wind in the coldest hours of the day and night. You have to be particularly careful feeding horses at any time because they don't adjust quickly to changes in their feed. The additional hay we feed does not present a problem but if we provide them with a sudden increase in grain and protein they could become very ill with gastro-intestinal distress and possibly die. Again, we have to be very careful with them.
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Some our chicks dining on pumpkin. |
Now for our little dinosaurs, our chickens. They are very cold-tolerant but again we take special precautions with their care during extreme cold weather. Like all livestock, we keep their water clear of ice and make sure they have plenty of it when it is cold. We provide them with shelter all year, but in the winter we have to be certain their surroundings are dry and free of draft. Their roosts are in places free of draft and adequate for the number of chickens we have in our flock. We increase their feed when it is cold so they are able keep themselves warm from the inside by being fat and healthy.
When the temperature in our area is forecast to go below 20 degrees F I install infrared heat lamps to keep them warm. Now that the worst of that cold snap has passed my measure for success with our chickens is how they are laying both through and after the cold. I am happy to say they have performed well, keeping their average production about the same or maybe a little higher than before the snap. They are all still healthy and full of energy. By measuring their success, I can give us, as their stewards, a passing grade and say that we have been successful as well.
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A young female cardinal flew into the glass of our window. It was unconscious when I found it, and I rubbed it and got it war and within thirty minutes it flew away. |
Now, we don't stop with the domestic animals. We also love the natural creatures that live around us all year. We have rabbits, raccoons, opossums, armadillos, deer, coyotes, foxes, turkeys, and all the birds that either live here all year, migrate quickly through on their way south, or migrate here for the winter to get out of the cold farther north. There is not much I can do for most of those. The majority of the wild creatures are on their own. With the forest growing around us they have abundant food, water, and shelter to survive the winter comfortably. However, the birds are different. We provide them with food, a lot of food, for the winter and keep feeding them through the other seasons.
This time of year we stay busy around here. We have a warm house and want all the animals we look after to be as comfortable as we are. We see ourselves as good stewards to them, that is, if they think of things like that.
Our job is to take care of those around us as we would want to be taken care of if we were in their position.
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