Our new chickens are no longer peeping; turn on the sound to listen to their curious clucking.
Month: September 2019
Greetings, your majesty
An animated GIF of the marked queen bee from our yellow hive:
GIF of inside the cat house
Something fun: I captured 38 pictures of the inside of the cat house last night, and stitched them together into an animated GIF, somewhat like a time-lapse (but the intervals between each frame aren’t evenly spaced):
Honey extraction, comb honey, chunk honey
Over the weekend we used a borrowed honey extractor to get the honey out of a couple of hive frames, plus cut six frames into 24 boxes of comb honey, and one frame into 8 jars of chunk honey.
Here are the frames in the baskets of the honey extractor; it’s basically a centrifuge, where the frames are spun quickly to force the honey out of the wax cells:
A look at the outside of the extractor; it has a crank handle to spin the baskets, a top chamber with the baskets, and a bottom chamber where the honey is collected:
This is a comb honey cutter, which cuts a square of the comb, which is then placed in the plastic boxes:
A hive box, and stacks of comb honey:
The extracted honey was then poured into a bucket with a fine mesh at the top, to filter out the globs of wax (the Flow hive is much easier!):
Here’s a view from inside of it flowing out:
We put the extractor outside so the rain could clean it… and a few bees turned up to help:
Then they told their sisters, and a large swarm of bees turned up:
They did a good job of cleaning it, though!
Meanwhile, Jenn cut the comb from another frame into half-sized portions, put them in jars, and poured filtered honey in to make chunk honey:
Here are a couple of jars of chunk honey:
The packaged comb and chunk honey (we’ll add labels later):
Cat update for week ending September 7
Continuing the cavalcade of Caturday!
Last weekend the cinderblock that the outdoor cat cam is housed within was knocked over:
Upon reviewing the footage, apparently that happened as a result of an encounter between the alien orange cat, Pumpkin, and two of our ferals, one in the feeder, and one on top of the camera housing:
When the latter took off at great speed, it was enough force to dislodge the block, resulting in this exciting view of the ground:
One day I plan to build a nice wooden housing for the camera, but it isn’t a high priority, so the stack of cinderblocks will suffice for now.
One peek at a couple of cats inside:
Another alien cat encounter, between the gray cat (Paladout) and Porcini:
After coming up behind unnoticed, she went around the back and hissed at him from the other side:
Here Porcini is having a good stretch while licking her lips after eating:
Four cats (one eating, three outside):
A raccoon looking at the camera:
Chasing a bug:
Another orange cat encounter; the feral is eating breakfast, oblivious to Pumpkin:
Then notices, and runs away:
Three cats, one looking at a bird:
A couple of cats on the deck, a couple relaxing by the tree:
Bella bapping a bug:
Porcini staring at a spider:
Flock Friday for September 6
Fantastic Flock Friday, Friends and Family!
Zoomy ducks:
Ducks flapping:
More zoomy ducks:
Duck at the bottom of the waterfall:
Fish and ducks:
The big koi are so huge:
Ducks near the bank:
On the bank:
The duck house, with ducks beyond, and koi in the pond:
I mucked out the chicken coops, and dumped a pile of fresh bedding (that they’ll spread out for me):
A queue impatiently waiting as the pop door opens:
We added a flock block; a compressed block of seeds and such as supplemental food:
Chickens with a corn cob:
Old and new chickens, separated by a fence:
The young chickens with a strawberry:
A couple of the older chickens with corn cob:
Old and young chickens:
Two years ago: surprise kittens
Just over two years ago, we discovered some kittens under our front steps. It seems like our feral cats have been here forever. Poppy chose well when she had her babies on our property (or maybe moved them here later?). Here are some pictures from back then.