Blog Tools
Edit your Blog
Build a Blog
View Profile
« April 2024 »
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30
You are not logged in. Log in
Entries by Topic
All topics
A beautiful soul passes
A Holiday
A New Grandson
A New Vision
A Week Off
After the book signing
Are You Shifting Reality?
Bad Stuff Comes in Threes
Bill's Passing
Birthday
Blue Star's New Book
Busy Days
Could he be an Indigo?
Coyote attack  «
Crasher finds a home
Creative Visualization
December Star Beacon
Earthquake warning
EFT a miraculous tool
Facing Intolerance
Facing the Future
Forthcoming Books
Fourth of July
Friendship Club revival in quest
Fun Questionnaire
Galactic Gathering in Denver
Goodbye Ethan
Granny Annie!
Gratitude
Grief
Headache cured
headaches
Historical UFO sighting
Honoring them
It's Mom's 84th birthday
It's Still Raining
Katrina's power
Lack of enthusiasm
lazy afternoon
Letting go of stress
Life is a gift
Love is the answer
Memorial Day Gloom
Merry May?
Nevada desert vacation
New book catalog, Food for the S
Nonessential materials
North Fork Herald
November Star Beacon
October TSB is up!
Paden City in our dreams
Positive Attitude
post-election depression
Rainbow Majesty synopsis
Ready for a good read?
Ryan's art
Ryan's Thesis Art Show
Scott's Graduation
Seeking Partner
Songbirds Return
Southwest Light debut
Southwest Light hosts Alternativ
Space Spirit documentary
Spiritual Cinema
Springtime in January
Summer's Heat
SW Light launches first event
Temporary Retirement
Thanksgiving
That Crazy Lady book
The Glow book review
The Light Being
The Living Matrix
The Shiavo Case
Tired of Winter
Toxic relationships
Transition
Tribute to Julian Joyce
TSB PDF now cheaper
UFO Watchtower
Ulrich's Space Trilogy
Venture goes ka-put!
Wanted: Your True Stories
When the end is in sight
Where did February go?
Winter's Very End
Earth Star Blog
Friday, 13 June 2008
Coyote attack on Jackson Run
Mood:  chillin'
Topic: Coyote attack

Looks like we’re finally getting some good summer weather. May was wetter and colder than I remember from last year. Our garden was put in late, due to the soil being too muddy. And it didn’t help that I threw my back out for several days from the rototiller.

 

We had a successful hatch on Jackson Run after the fourth broody hen got serious. The spotted Sussex whom I named “Spot” managed to hatch two identical Araucana chicks on April 24. Actually, I discovered several days into her broodiness that Spot was sitting on a light bulb. I snatched that away and placed four fresh eggs out of the refrigerator underneath her. Spot sat for 21 more days, with that entranced look on her face. What a delight it was to discover the two baby chicks from the fertile eggs.

 

Spot took good care of her two chicks, but a couple of weeks ago, while my husband and I were away for most the day, one of the chicks vanished. With a sinking heart I knew something had killed it. We didn’t want to think it was possible, but we now suspect our cat, Jessica, helped herself to a miniature chicken dinner while we were gone. Jessica had been outside, and she remained outside without coming in to eat the rest of the day. To top that off, Jessica must have had a guilty conscience because she stayed out all night!

 

When the mother hen appeared to abandon the remaining chick, I took measures to secure the poor little thing in the cat carrier for several days, until the little thing could be better equipped to resist harm. At night I’d let it out to mingle with the other birds in the hen house. Mother Spot ignored her youngster, for the most part. Eventually, we decided to throw caution to the wind and let the little bird out to run with the others. Somehow Spot has reclaimed her maternal instincts and the two can be seen running around together. Little “Suzy Q,” as I named her, is as happy as can be to be free again.

 

We lost an adult chicken last week to a predator — our first real loss this year. I was mowing and discovered the pile of feathers in our field. My first guess was a hawk. However, two days later, in the early evening, there was a major commotion in the chicken yard. I stepped outside just in time to see a coyote with a bushy tail take off into the woods from the fenced-in chicken yard. Within minutes the dog was after it, but the coyote naturally got away.

 

How helpless and scared it feels to know you have a predator and that it will undoubtedly come back! I debated on whether to keep the birds penned in or inside their house all day. That just wasn’t an option. Why have birds if they can’t be happy and free range like they are used to doing? The solution was putting a radio up and blaring it into the woods all day long. I used to do that in Colorado, and it worked. So now we have golden oldies disrupting the beautiful silence of our property during daylight hours. I had to sacrifice something to save the birds. So far, so good!

 

Now here’s the strangest thing I’ve ever seen. One of my hens dropped an egg outside, next to the pond by their chicken house. I picked it up and thought, “What the heck is this?” The egg was green (Araucana) but it was three times larger and heavier than a normal-sized chicken egg. I took it inside and showed the family. “That’s a turkey egg,” said my stepson. “Maybe it’s from that heron we see,” suggested my husband.

 

I thought about hatching it in an incubator, but on Sunday morning we broke the humungous egg open, and you’ll never guess what was inside! First, the white and the yolk of a normal egg poured out into a bowl. But then… THEN another fully formed, hard-shelled green egg came out… and inside of THAT was a normal white and yolk like the other one.

 

I never heard of a chicken laying an egg inside an egg! Too weird. Of course, I took pictures, and then wished I had taken a video to put up on You Tube. We all had a good laugh over this, but somewhere outside there’s a poor hen with a mighty sore behind

Posted by earthstar at 3:55 PM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink

Newer | Latest | Older