Anglesey Smallholder

No More Animals

by MrZebra on Aug.13, 2011, under The Animals

Last week, the final remaining chicken had to be put down due to fly strike.  It was very distressing – I tried to clean her up and get the maggots out, but she had a deep abscess full of them.  If I get some more chickens then I will have to bathe them regularly to make sure this doesn’t happen again.  It seems that by the time it’s noticeable, it’s already too late.

We’ve had a few little problems with the new mower – while my brother was using it, a large circlip came loose on the roller and dropped off in the field.  I repaired the metal detector and had a search for it, but to no avail.  I went inside assuming that my brother would either keep looking for the clip or put the roller away, but instead he decided to keep using it.  It should be obvious what happened next – without the circlip to keep it on there, one side of the roller’s axle popped out of the frame, and completely bent the other side of the frame.  I don’t know what possessed him to carry on using it when it was so predictable what would happen.

In happier news, the polytunnel is in full swing.  The cucumbers are growing faster than I can eat them and the tomatoes are ripening.  I just hope we can have some sunshine to ripen them fully, because it’s been a bit gray recently.  I pulled up the pattypans – I ate a couple and they were bitter and nasty, I won’t be planting any more of them!  The courgette plant doesn’t seem to be doing quite as well this year either, they are growing but not getting big for some reason.  It’s putting out huge amounts of leaves though – I have to keep cutting it back to stop it from swamping all the other plants.

5 comments for this entry:
  1. Chris

    Wow, so sorry to hear about your chooks. Flystrike! Awful.

    Not sure what to suggest about it. My chooks have ‘dug’ themselves a dust bath which they use regularly. The coops get mucked out v. regularly and anyway, they tend to eat any flies about.

    I’ll keep a more watchful eye out for them in the future though.

    Re-courgettes. Sounds like a lack of pollination of the flowers. If they’re in a pollytunnel then it may be that the pollinating insects can’t get in to do their stuff or maybe it’s been too windy / wet to fly.

    I have used a soft paint brush to pollinate pumpkins and sqaush’s before and you can do the same with courgettes. Found this link that might help.

    http://completegarden.wordpress.com/2008/08/21/how-to-hand-pollinate-courgette-flowers/

    Your bro is lucky he didn’t injure himself…

  2. john

    hello
    flystrike with chickens is a new one for me…
    I will keep an eye out for it though
    greeting from trelawnyd ( just up the coast)

  3. MrZebra

    Hi there, thanks for your comment!
    Yes fly strike is very nasty for the poor chickens. By the time you notice it it tends to be too late :(

  4. Debbie

    Just stumbled across your blog. As a fellow Anglesonian I found it very interesting and informative. Im new to the veggie growing/chicken keeping lifestyle, but hoping to take a greener path. This fly strike is new to me and sounds dreadful. I’ll be keeping an even closer eye on my girls now. We recently lost one of them and I was devestated. We need to get more, and were thinking about ex battery. Do you know anywhere locally. Cant bear to think of them living in those conditions.

  5. MrZebra

    Thanks! It is really dreadful. I don’t know anywhere locally that has battery hens, but there are some societies that help with rehoming, so you might try one of those. My friend has some information and links on her blog here: http://www.smallestsmallholding.com/battery-hen-welfare-trust/

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