Category Archives: Turkeys

Chicken Nesting Boxes and Turkey First Aid

We have gotten back to the business of the property. We had three weeks of guests visiting which was great. We took some time away from our projects to hang out with them, but now we are back into the swing of things again. It’s fun to spend time with friends and take a break from all the landscaping and design planning and it helped to reinvigorate our interest in our newest projects.

The most recent one we completed was to build a nesting box with three chambers. The chickens are now about 16-17 weeks old and while they usually don’t start laying until about 20-25 weeks, we did have a Leghorn in Greeley who started laying little pullet eggs around 16 weeks, so we wanted to be prepared. We are so excited to finally start eating our own fresh eggs again!

Rooster

The roosters are crowing and the hens will soon be laying

The first thing we did was to scope out where we would like to have the boxes. When we originally built the coop we were thinking of having the boxes inside the coop itself. After talking with a few people about it, we decided that it would be better if we had them on the outside where we could reach in and take the eggs out without disturbing all the birds inside and it would keep things cleaner as well.

We thought about putting them on the northern side of the coop, but then switched to the southern side where I would more easily be able to reach the boxes and the eggs without a step stool.

Then we drew up some plans and scavenged through the remaining wood from the deck bathroom. We had to pick up a few small parts from the store but otherwise we were able to repurpose most everything.

Nesting boxes (2)

Our friend Anthony stopped by and helped with some of the roofing design and helped out when we needed to cut the metal!

Paint nesting boxes

Our final steps were to paint it to match the coop and then to install it to the coop. I held it up as Britton screwed it solidly in place.

Nesting Boxes Cassie 1

We still need to cut holes into the walls from the inside and add locks to the boxes, but I think it turned out really well!

nesting boxes (5)
New addition to the coop! The egg dispenser!

We also recently had a turkey baby with a mysterious problem. Something happened in the middle of the night as they were huddled in the plastic tub. The turkey apparently fell into the water dish and then couldn’t stand up. By the time morning came and we found it, the poor turkey was in a sad state.

broken turkey 1
Sad looking turkey baby

At first we just tried warming her up which helped stop the shivering, but still she couldn’t stand. Then I noticed that the knee joint was all swollen and researched that the Achilles can slip. All the sites said that I could gently push the tendon back over the hump of the bone. I was a little nervous of hurting her, but it worked!

Unfortunately, the moment she put any pressure on it again such as standing, it would pop right off and she would drop back to the ground.  So I tried bandaging it with tape, a piece of Q-tip and Bandaids, but it wouldn’t stay where I set it. Finally after a long search, we found that self-adhering athletic wrap would work to hold the joint in place. And while she still has a slight limp and some swelling, it seems to be working and she can walk again!

Need some veterinary medicine and coop mods? No problem. Just another couple skills in our new island life tool box.

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Use Your Outside Voice

You know when you were a kid running around like crazy and getting into all kinds of adventures (aka trouble) and making lots of noise and laughing a lot?

Justin and Me
My brother and I as kids

Then, some adult, usually your parent or teacher would say, “Calm down and use your inside voice”.

And then, slowly and strangely, somewhere down the line, we become the adult?

Yah, well, sorry but we’re changing back. Britton and I have had a complete revolution from our life as adults and are turning back into kids again. It wasn’t exactly a calculated decision. It just sort of happened. Kind of like becoming adults. We have just sort of become kids again.

We spend so much time now just living and playing and laughing at all our mistakes and the strangeness of life again that it was bound to happen. We are outdoors so much more and are doing so many things that kids would do, we sometimes have to remind ourselves that there are still people who have to wake up at a prescribed time, stay in the lines, keep doors shut, wear clothes (or shoes), have schedules and clocks, and act “normal”.

We don’t anymore.

We now have extra time for whatever. The first things that start to come back when you return to being a kid again are creative pursuits like art, music and games.

Cassie and GuitarLearning to play the guitar

I have heard that a good guide for where you should orient yourself in setting your life’s path/purpose  is to ask yourself what you loved to do as a kid. A kid of around 10-12, when you knew a little bit about your choices and preferences, but you still just knew how to have fun and not take things so seriously. Give it a try and see what you come up with and how it aligns with your life now.

When I was a kid I LOVED summertime, swimming and animals. If I could have designed my life when I was about 10 years old it would have been a constant summer of swimming, playing with friends, reading, drawing, learning new things and having lots and lots of animals.

IMG_6137
Now: Lotsa turkeys!

When Britton was a kid he had a BB gun, went swimming daily in the summers, messed around with technical gadgets, played guitar and bass, played outside with friends and enjoyed video games.

Sounds pretty close! We’ve added in a few other interests, but basically…our lives have come full circle back to being kids again. Kids with a few more responsibilities, but a kid’s life none-the-less.

Still, sometimes we get caught in our old, adult-like ways. For instance, talking at a relatively normal indoor  volume. When we are outside we are often busy with something: turkeys or chickens, pulling weeds, watering plants, sawing down trees, making trails, etc. And so if we talk normally to one another and are on two sides of the yard, we can’t hear each other and so we end up saying it multiple times. So now, we remind each other to “use your outside voice!”

Just today we took a long walk around the property. With four acres of jungle, this is not a quick or easy task. It took us about 2 1/2 hours to hike around and clear some trails.

Almond tree
On a huge upturned tropical almond tree in the bottom of the quebrada of the property

We have many large mango trees all over the jungle and so we are going to call it mango tree trail.

Mango magic tree
Mango tree at the base of the quebrada that would make a great treehouse or campfire area (when dry)

It is pretty amazing, actually, that we haven’t even really seen half the property. But it makes it fun too…every kid loves doing some exploring. And we always find cool stuff.

IMG_6352
Not sure what plant this is but it was growing on top of another plant

Shell Ginger
There is a huge shell ginger plant that is growing from the front gate area all the way down the slope
Peach tree
The peach tree has even flowered!

It has been such a kick to be a kid in a grown-up’s body. Sure there are those pesky responsibilities that we didn’t have as kids, but there are also all those resources we didn’t have then too. And don’t forget the things that you wanted and weren’t allowed as kids, we now CAN have and do as adults. It’s the best of both worlds, really.

And I don’t mind saying that loudly.

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Challenges of Jungle Lite: Termite Swarms and Rat Attacks

When we arrived to Puerto Rico and were talking about all the challenges of living in a tropical environment, someone remarked that in comparison to some areas, the Puerto Rico jungle is “Jungle Lite”. This is because in other parts of the world, such as the Amazon or even Central America, you might find big cats like panthers or howling monkeys and venomous snakes and spiders, none of which we have on this island.

Still, I would say that adjusting to the tropics, even “jungle lite” tropics like Puerto Rico takes some getting used to. Coming from Colorado, we were not used to the humidity or the ocean or the flora and fauna. We have mostly come to a balance with these things, but then we are hit with a new challenge to sort out. Like the ones we had last night and today.

Termites
Termite season!

Yesterday we had a pretty good afternoon rain. We let the chickens out around 5pm and did a free range supervision like we do until they put themselves back into the coop when the sky darkens (around 7pm). Then we went into the house to make dinner. We noticed one then another “moth” flying around the light. We ignored it because we often see the occasional moth. Then we saw a few more. Then they started landing on us and it became a little annoying until we knew we had to do something! Britton swatted one and its wings fell off. That’s when we knew they weren’t moths but rather…termites! Agh!

They call termites both polilla and comejen here. I asked someone once what the difference was and he said that polilla fly and comejen don’t. So I guess we had the flight of the polilla last night.

IMG_6296Candlelight to keep the termites away

We had been paying attention to what people had said years before about the termite swarms, so we shut all the windows and turned out the lights since they are attracted to the light. We lit a citronella candle and finished cooking dinner while enjoying a glass of wine. In the morning there were termite wings all over the floor, but not nearly as many as there could have been had we not acted quickly.

The most recent encounter with jungle lite was this morning. Britton had gone out and worked on chopping some of the trees into smaller more manageable pieces, but knew it was starting to get a little too hot to continue working. So, we decided to hang out in the cool cabana for a while and watch a movie.

TurkeysTurkeys in the tractor

Suddenly I hear the baby turkeys just outside our cabana door in the turkey tractor making a bunch of chirping racket. I ran out the door and see a rat pulling a turkey by its wing underneath the tractor side walls. I yelled at it hoping it would drop the bird but it just kept scurrying and went through the chain link fence link with the turkey! Britton ran out and we both jumped around trying to throw on some clothes and shoes so we could try and chase the rat and find the turkey. Britton scaled the fence and I ran all the way around down the steep embankment and climbed my way through the thicket of vines and sansevieria plants. We hacked away for a good 45 minutes calling for the bird and looking for a trail of feathers or anything that would give us a lead, but found nothing.

Apparently turkeys and chickens are not only tasty birds to us humans, but also to most of the jungle life out here. These birds are pretty vulnerable at such a young and small age, but we didn’t think anything would attack them in broad daylight with us just 5 feet away.

Britton and I remarked that we feel like we are in a nature show and we are just one of the many creatures here. It is difficult to remember that when we are so used to being in our own separate humanland of cities and walls instead of jungle and wildlife. Even if it is jungle lite, the jungle still knows way more than we do about living here and gives us some lessons nearly every day.

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It’s Turkey Lurkey Time

Well it is round 2 here at Paradise Acres!  Round 1 consisted of receiving our chickens and building a coop for them to hang out in.  Round 2 as I have started to call it started with receiving our turkeys in the mail.  I have to give the Rincón Post Office credit here, they have always gotten us our birds in a timely manner and we appreciate it.  With this particular delivery we even received a Facebook message from the post master letting us know that the turkeys were here!

Turkey Poults Poults in a Box

Round 1 involved a lot of setup work as far as clearing a place to put the coop, then moving all of the wood piece by piece from the old bathroom to the new location.  Hey, at least it wasn’t an uphill move!  Round 1 also involved a learning curve from our previous 6 chickens from our backyard flock to 25 here on our homestead.  Having that many more chicks presented a space problem that occurred VERY quickly, more so than with just 6.  We thought that having the bathtub would be good enough for them for a while which in hindsight wasn’t big enough for much more than a week.

Having 15 turkeys is going to be an extension on that.  The breed of turkey we got, Royal Palm Turkeys, are at least not as large as the traditional breed of turkeys that are raised for meat production.  These guys will only get to 10-12 pounds in size.  They are one of the only breeds that are not selected primarily for meat production, though they will make a fine meal when that time comes. These are heritage breeds meaning they can reproduce on their own and are not the commercial standard that just sits around and eats all day long. They are active and beautiful birds.

The poults so far have been about the same as chicks.  Some of the differences we have noticed is that they have already had a tendency to imprint on us.  When we walk around and a poult is out with us it will happily follow us around.  We have heard this is a turkey trait in general.  It’s cute.  The poults also seem to be just a bit more chill than chicks are.  They aren’t as frantic.  They are pretty amusing to watch.  The males (we think) already poof up and try to act tough.  As poults they look a lot like chicks except for the little unicorn horn above their beak. They also all huddle in a corner when it is time to sleep.  Just a big ball.

Royal Palm Poult
Thanksgiving Dinner

Poults in Yard
Thanksgiving and Christmas Dinner Playing in the Yard

Round 1 with the chickens also taught us about hawks.  The hawks here are becoming a nuisance to what we are trying to accomplish.  A hawk took one of our polish hens and attacked another chick that had escaped.  Yesterday when Cassie and I came down to work in the yard I saw a hawk fly from the coop to a tree elsewhere on the property, I was like……”WTF”.   That is when I noticed another hawk sitting on the ground in the middle of our path.  I am thinking that we may need to introduce another animal into our plan that will protect the chickens and turkeys or at the very least just scare/chase the hawks.  Not sure if this would be a dog or if the roosters and Toms will be able to handle that when they get to full size.  I mean seriously, the hawks were trying to get at the chickens that are INSIDE the coop!  I am glad I made it super secure.

Rooster
Grow Rooster! GROW!

We only let the chickens range when we are present and watching.  I tried to let them out once when I was just in the yard working, but a hawk made an attempt at them so we had to change our strategy so that we are watching them closely.  We have seen as many as 4 hawks in the sky above our property.  Wikipedia states that they rarely prey on standard sized chickens, I have my doubts about that.  I have a feeling they will always be there and always be making attempts.  Because of that our turkeys will be under lock and key until they reach a good size.  The toms should make for good protection when they are big enough as well as the roosters.

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