Author Archives: Britton

Chumming the Fish

The other day a friend of mine had an open spot on a fishing boat charter and asked if I wanted to go.  I figured that I should take him up on it as I hadn’t ever done it before.  A new experience would be fun and I know virtually nothing about ocean fishing.  The boat was a 35 foot 500hp Contender, which also piqued my interest.  I told them I’d go and we met up at 6am a few days later.

Contender
Fishing Boat for the Day

I brought a few burritos and drank my coffee and we waited for the other guys to show up.  They told me that we were going to be using live bait.  Meant nothing to me when they said it.

We left the marina and the water was super clear.  We ended up going off to catch the live bait.  The live bait, or sardines are caught with a drop net off the boat.  It is also possible to catch these off the shore and now I know what those guys with nets are doing on the shore.  Getting sardines.

Sardines
Filling the Bait Boxes with Sardines

Once the bait wells were filled with sardines we set out for a destination several miles off shore called the hump.  The hump is the top of an underwater mountain that comes up to about 90 feet under the surface at its height.  When we got out there the water was a super dark blue color unlike I’ve seen before.

Desecheo
View of Desecheo from The Hump

We sat in the water and cast hooks baited with live sardines.  We weren’t getting much, if any action.  The boat rocked and I think once we stopped I started to get a little queasy from the waves but kept waiting for a bite.  The captain decided that we should move to another spot, so we reeled in and he started the motors.  Once the boat started to move my queasiness vanished.

The boat moved pretty fast at ~30 knots across the surface and the view of Puerto Rico from the water was super cool.

Horned Dorset from sea
Horned Dorset

Land and sea
Land and Sea

We stopped just north of Domes.  The boat started to do its rocking thing as we cast our bait out into the water again.  Now I have flown in small planes quite a bit and haven’t experienced any kind of motion sickness, but the rocking did eventually get to me and I upchucked over the side of the boat.  I figure this was just more chum to attract the fish right?  I kept my pole in the water and did get a fish on the line shortly after.  I had a good fight but eventually the fish cut the line and I was left with nothing.

Our friend Tommy did manage to catch a good sized black fin.  I haven’t ever seen a fish like this before.  I was kind of shocked and now understand ocean fishing a lot more.  When I first took off I didn’t honestly know what to expect, at all.  The whole experience was new to me.

black fin tuna
Big Tuna

We had a bonfire down at our house later that night and Tommy prepared sashimi that was…absolutely…..delicious.  I haven’t ever had fish that fresh.  I think I will definitely go fishing again only the next time I think I will have my sea legs as well as a better understanding of how it works and a better chance of reeling in something.

Sushi!
Huge Plate of Sashimi

Moonlight bonfire
Moonlight Fire

We sat around the fire and sang songs while eating some great food!  It turned out to be an amazing day, one that I will remember for a long time.

Bees in a Jar

Today as I was walking from the cabana down to the coop with the daily catch of fallen mangoes for the compost pile I got a bit of a surprise.  A bee up and stung me in the ear!  I dropped all the mangoes and ran while the bruised and over-ripe fruit started rolling down the hill.  At about the same time the water hose popped and sprung a leak!

Cassie said I looked like a cartoon with my flailing about, yelling and running.  As we were going back towards the cabana there were more bees bumping us, giving us that tell tale warning that they are going to attack.

We got in the cabana and shut the door….. “Holy smokes!  What the hell was that?”  Had we stepped on one on the way down to the coop?  We normally don’t get stung by the few bees that visit the yard, especially having cleared out all the previous hives living within the wood house and the trunk of the old mango tree.  Bees are supposed to only sting when they feel threatened or if the hive is under attack.

After about 10 minutes and looking at my stung ear as it swelled we decided to go back out and see if we could figure out what was going on.  We went up on top of the cabana because it offers a good view.  We weren’t up there 5 minutes and we started getting bumped again by bees.  We ran.  We got back in the cabana and decided that there was something up and that we would give them some time to calm down.  We went to town for some food, groceries and another mower blade.

When we went to let the chickens out Cassie spotted what was causing all the commotion.

Swarm (2)
Bee Swarm (click to enlarge)

There were quite a few bees on one of the Mexicola avocado tree leaves, so we must have a swarm on our hands.  This is a very small swarm by swarm standards, actually tiny.  This was a perfect opportunity for me to use my newbee bee keeping skills!  I went and grabbed a jar, some scissors, gloves and the bee veil.

It didn’t take very long, and I didn’t get stung but there is a queen in with the swarm.  Not sure where it came from or why it is so small, but it all went well and put an end to the bee sting mystery and I gained 5 experience points in my bee skills!  I would rather do this with a small amount of bees to start with.  If there were hundreds of bees it would have been more intimidating but I think even then I would be up to the task.

We don’t have an empty hive yet, but now we think we should have one around for the next swarm opportunity.  For this group I am just glad they aren’t going to end up inside the walls of the house and I wanted to take care of a potential issue as well as some aggressive bees in the yard. Bees are not known for being aggressive when they swarm.  I think it is possible they were fighting with another hive in the base of the big mango we took down a few weeks ago. There were some bees flying super fast all over today.

Bees in a jar
Bees in a Jar

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.

The Tree That Bleeds

I was working in the yard the other day sawing down more trees (surprise!).  I came across a huge turpentine tree that we have been jokingly referring to as the “tumor tree” due to a huge break in the base of the tree where termites had setup shop.  The huge black nest and resulting area where the tree tried to grow around them was pretty ugly.

Due to the size of the tree I had decided to hold off on cutting it down until one day I got the motivation to do the deed.  So I started sawing into it with the chainsaw.  I was sawing away and all of a sudden I saw a huge gush of what looked like tobacco spit coming out from the cut.  When I say gush, I mean GUSH.  There was literally many gallons of this nasty liquid pouring out.  It really caught me off guard.  My first thought was something along the lines of “Wow…That is a lot of…sap?  No no…That can’t be sap…can it?  Maybe it is really porous honey?  I don’t see any bees….hmm..This is really gross. It’s still pouring out……wow.”

Once the tree was down on the ground I inspected it a bit and it actually appears to be water mixed in with the termite nest.  The termites had done a good job of hollowing out the dead parts of the tree and rain water had filled the cavity.  It was pretty disgusting to see especially since I wasn’t expecting it.

Tumor tree
Tumor Tree Down

We also noticed the other day that the avocado that we cut down when we first started clearing the property has shot up a few new sprouts just as some of you had predicted!  I think it may turn out that we did the avocado tree a huge favor by getting rid of all the termites and vines that had plagued it and given it a new lease on life.

Avacado Regrowing
Avocado Sprouting Back to Life

We also received our shipment of turkey poults today!  We will have more updates on them soon.

Turkey Poults
Day old Royal Palm Turkey Poults