Category Archives: Turkeys

Progression of a Turkey Coop

The turkeys are getting bigger and bigger and definitely outgrowing the little turkey/chicken tractor. It is a lot more work to repurpose materials than it is to just go out and buy them, so it has taken a bit longer than we anticipated to finish.

Turkeys
Turkeys watching as the coop walls are being made

First Britton pulled the boards off the deck, then he had to powerwash them and sort which ones were usable. He had to take out all the old nails and saw off any bad parts and chop them to the proper size.

Turkey Coop
Britton and a turkey coop wall

We still had to buy a few pieces of wood as well as the roofing material. Then we were able to build the walls and the roof. Today, we are working on sourcing some of the old T-111 siding from the wood house. Then we will be installing it, building a door, putting on the wire as well as building a trap door and under area. So we still have a ways to go, but our goal is to finish it by this weekend if possible.

Turkey Coop (2)

In other news, the egg machine has started production! Just when our spirits were the lowest after the dog attack on the chickens, we found our first little white egg and then the next day a green egg! We are super excited to eat our own eggs. After the trials and tribulations of getting all these birds to adulthood, it tastes like victory.

First Egg

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The Wait is Over: Puerto Rico’s Summertime

Summer in Puerto Rico is a bit hotter and more humid than the rest of the year, but generally it feels pretty good to me. Of course, I have always liked the weather a bit on the hot side. When it gets too hot we go snorkeling or lay in the baby pool or take lots of showers. If it rains, everything gets cooled down quite a bit, but then the bugs come out. In fact, I would say that everything here seems to be waiting for the rains so that they can come out.

All the bugs, all the plants, and the animals. Even us. Everything has been waiting for the right moment to be in full bloom before it takes off with life. And sometimes nature acquiesces and it rains every day for an hour, three days in a row and then she becomes fickle and it doesn’t rain again for a week. But it has been enough for things to get the cue for their yearly debut.

Quenepas
Quenepas growing!

I was taking a look at one of the citrus trees when I felt a shake on the tree. Suddenly a lizard pops up. It is not unusual to find lots of gecko lizards all around, but this one was bright green. A baby iguana! I decided I would try and catch it. I had no idea whether or not they bit, but I thought I would try anyway. I aimed for the tail, and through my chicken and turkey catching (and mosquito and ant swatting) I have developed quicker Ninja reflexes.

I snatched him right off the branch upside down. He wiggled around a bit and Britton brought me a plant pot and we threw him in there. Unfortunately the pot had a rather large drain hole and he snuck out. Not 10 minutes later, though, at another area of the yard, I caught another one and we were able to take some pictures of him. I held him with a plastic bag because he was indeed trying to swing around and bite my fingers!

Baby Iguana (small)

We have read that iguanas lay and hatch about 50 eggs in a clutch and so they must have just hatched somewhere on or near our property because they are all over, if you can just see them through the greenery. I think iguana may indeed soon be a common dinner option around here. Especially with all the fruit and vegetables that we want to eat (and not feed to them)!

Quite a few trees and plants are bearing fruit already which is awesome. We have so many passionfruits (parchas) that the vine covering the other tree makes it look like we hung Christmas globe ornaments all over it.

Parcha vine
Parcha vine in a tree with a fruit

After picking some of the parcha, we laid them in the sun for them to yellow a bit more until they ripen fully.

Parcha line
A line of parchas

We have also noticed the breadfruit is fruiting as well as the quenepas. The guava tree is flowering and even our new lime tree is fruiting. And our everbearing starfruit tree continues to impress us with its abundance.

Guava Flower
Guava flowers!

Breadfruit
Breadfruit (we are not exactly sure the best time to pick them or the best way to cook them)

It has been pretty cool to be able to go outside every day of the year and interact in some way with nature. My dreams have become filled with plants and animals much more than the human dramas that filled them before.

Polish Hendrix(small)
The chickens and turkeys are doing great!

I feel much more connected to the food and the land. We have also become much more patient. Delayed gratification is a must when you wish to eat from the land, even if it is just a portion of your food. We had to become patient and wait for the chickens to grow to full size and now the hawks for the most part leave them alone. And now we wait for their eggs. We have to wait until the plants feel strong enough to fruit. We cannot rush anything along.

Even building the coops have helped to remind us of this. It would be much easier to simply buy new wood or a prefab shed rather than have to take down an existing structure, remove the nails, powerwash the wood, sort it, cut it to a new size and then reuse it. But it is much less wasteful and more resourceful to repurpose something and give it new life the way nature does every day in her cyclical way.

Britton has done a great job with all of these projects that he has built nearly completely himself without any outside help (besides me, when I am his assistant).

Coop site
Turkey coop base is coming along

So for the patient ones, the Puerto Rico summer has many gifts. The ocean is flat and full of fish and turtles, the roads are quieter (except for the Noche de San Juan which was one huge party!) and all the food -including iguana- has decided the time is ripe for the picking!

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Start of a Turkey Coop and End of a Deck

We had wavered a little on whether or not to build a turkey coop. After all, we have a pretty kickass chicken coop that is about 70 square feet. A few turkeys should be able to fit pretty well, right?

Turkey face
Hey, where’s my coop?

Well, we have learned a lot more about raising birds and we have found that they are rather territorial and since these birds weren’t raised together, it could be quite the task to try and cohabitate them. Plus, there are some diseases that chickens can transmit to turkeys, so we decided to go ahead and build them a coop.

Another factor in our wavering was the cost. To build a coop similar to the chickens’ from new wood would probably cost a good thousand dollars. We didn’t have another deck bathroom to remove so what should we do? We talked about bamboo, a hoop house, just a covered run until they were bigger and could sleep in the trees…None of these choices sounded like the right one.

House before

Then one day as we were discussing it, I looked up at the wood house and said, “Well, aren’t we planning on removing the deck and building a new one anyway? If we are going to spend $1000+ on wood shouldn’t it be on OUR structure instead of the turkeys?” And so that is when the turkey coop decision was finally made.

Britton started by removing the bars from the window on the part of the deck that he would be dismantling. From the inside it is pretty hard to get at because it is right over the stairwell. There is a little hatch that folds over to stand on over the stairs in order to reach the window. Sometimes we feel like the house is more a big boat than a house!

Window board over stair

Next, he started to take apart the deck itself. This process took a bit of time, but wasn’t too complicated.

BK on Deck
Removing the deck on a gorgeous day

Once the wood was on the ground we were able to sort out which pieces would work and which were too far gone. Some of them are aesthetically worn down, but will still function in a coop. It is pretty amazing, actually how well this deck has stood up to the time and weather. It is probably about 25 years old and hasn’t had any maintenance done on it in at least 15! And yet, here it still stood! At least until we got our hands on it!

Britton and pile o wood
Cleaning and powerwashing the boards

The next phase was choosing a site and starting the base once more. The turkey coop will be similar in style and construction to the chicken coop, but just down the hill a ways more.

Cassie at the coop site 1At the coop site!

Another end brings yet another beginning. We are looking forward to saying, “So long, deck and hello, turkey coop!”

House without a deck
The house with half its deck removed

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Leaving the Compound AKA Our Trip to Mayaguez

We enjoy people and like to get out and be social occasionally, but are perfectly content hanging out with each other on the property much of the time. We have plenty to do and enough space to stretch our legs and go for a walk even if it is just a hike through the lower jungle.

When our friends stayed with us a few weeks ago they remarked as we did all our farm chores we would need to do in order to leave like loading up the turkeys, locking up everything, feeding and checking on the chickens, watering the gardens and grabbing something to eat, “You really don’t leave very much do you?” And we replied, “Nope…I guess not!”

From fire pit up at house
View from halfway down the hill looking up

It’s pretty cool just hanging out on the property what with all that we have set in motion with the plants, animals and projects, but sometimes we do have to go out and face society/civilization again. Usually it is to restock on some supplies. As the list grows and grows, it finally comes to a point where we need to “go in to town.”

For instance today’s list for the trip to Mayaguez looked a little like this:

Walkie-talkies
Golf Balls
Bags of Cement
Toilet Paper
Posts
Screws
Nails
Screen doors
Fishing Line
Watch battery
Gear Shift Boot
Binoculars

Some of these are not for what you might think. The walkie-talkies are for communicating with each other when one of us is in one part of the property and the other is somewhere else, though we had a lot of fun messing with them while we were in the Mayaguez Mall sending out random “Código Rojo” calls.

Kitty and walkies
Kitty and the walkie-talkies

The golf balls were the hardest of all to find! We went to three stores looking for them! And we did not go on this crazy scavenger hunt because we are huge golf fans. (We in fact are laughably horrible at golf, but we have fun trying.) It is because we needed to use them as egg decoys to encourage the chickens to use the new nesting boxes.

golf ball
Golf ball in the nesting box!

The fishing line, similarly, is not for fishing but rather to keep the hawks away. Apparently from what we have read, hawks are reticent to enter any area that seems like a trap and so stringing fishing line is a deterrent. The binoculars are also to keep an eye out for hawks and iguanas in the trees as well as to bird watch. We have seen a little pitirre nest in the algarroba tree right above the chicken coop which is great because these little birds have been dive bombing the hawks left and right! Another great deterrent!

We ended up going to so many stores in order to get these and other items: Wal-Mart, Marshall’s, a watch repair kiosk, a fruit stand (inside the mall), a papa asada lunch cart, Radio Shack, Home Depot, Sports Connection, Triangle Motors, K-Mart, and Sam’s. After about 5 hours of running all around we were totally worn out by the time we got home.

We should be good now for a couple of weeks before we need to go back to Mayaguez for a supply run. We are in the early stages of building a turkey coop, so we needed some materials for that as well. We are going to re-use as much material as possible including some wood from the deck.

The turkeys are growing a lot and we know they will need a coop soon. They are so sweet and a lot different from chickens in how they respond to us. They like to sit in our laps and just be pet. They also just follow us around everywhere and always want to be near us when we take them on walks.  Something we could not have done with chickens at this age.

Britton Turkey walk
Taking the turkeys on a walk

All the running around in town with traffic, lines and people is such a drastic contrast to what we do most of the time, but it is fun in its own way. We are reminded of the larger area in which we live and all the vibrant characters all around and we are able to bring back supplies to keep our favorite things going and growing back at the finca.

chicken and pineapple These are a few of our favorite things!

 

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