Showing posts with label small farms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label small farms. Show all posts

Sunday, March 13, 2016

Caring for Domestic Geese

For many the domestic goose is a creature they wish to avoid. Geese are noisy, they chase and bite! Well, true, some do. However with a small introduction to the Anser species, one can find geese fit right into the small farm or even the backyard farm along with ducks but without the disease problems of turkeys.

Before you can decide to add any waterfowl, like geese or ducks to your farmstead, here's a few things about them:

1. Geese (and Ducks) are not chickens! Well, duh everyone knows that. Do they? When it comes to caring for these different species, a surprising number of people will care for them as if they were chickens by providing the same housing and feed, for starters.

2. Geese need a pond to swim in. Well, yes-- sort of.

3. They migrate in the fall. Maybe, but domestic geese at our place haven't yet, and for good reason!

Taking the first point: often due to lack of factual resources, and they are hard to come by, many have fallen into the "feed trap" by supposing chicken feed is good because it says so on the feed bag. Big difference here between chickens, who are land animals (they hate getting wet!) and water fowl: chickens are omnivores, meaning they eat everything from fruits, grains, vegetables to meat, and then look for more.

 Geese on the other hand are vegetarians. Their best diet is composed of quality pasture in fair weather and, quality grass hay in cold weather when fresh pasture is not available. In late fall, the addition of a small amount of grain such as oats, barley, millet or corn given daily in a quantity of 4-6 ounces per bird with all the grass/grass hay they care to eat, and unlimited drinking water is the best thing to feed your geese. They also require grit to digest their food. Provide clean sand such as 'play' sand for them to eat free choice. Geese, you see are 'grazing animals', much like sheep, cows, horses or others. They benefit from clean, well managed pasture and may happily graze along side of other, larger stock animals.

Chickens need greater quantities of protein for laying fresh eggs daily so a 16-18 per cent protein feed is appropriate. The goose requires less, about 12 per cent is good but not less than 10 per cent, much of which is supplied by their grazing and a small amount of grain fed in fall prior to their egg laying season, about February to May of each year.

Feather care is important to all fowl and they will spend a significant time daily preening and cleaning themselves.  Geese will spend even more. They care for their flight feathers, their pin feathers and carefully oil each one to ensure buoyancy when in water. Help your geese keep clean by providing them free range grass in your open yard or pasture, with solid fencing such as horse wire fence or chain link to protect them from predators and domestic dogs. Also provide a secure night time coop, allowing aprox. 2-4 square feet per bird to protect them in absence of a pond which they might otherwise flee to when threatened. Use 6-8 inches of straw bedding in the coop, as it is their preferred bedding.

Second: While a pond is nice, geese do not require one. Ponds in fact are a major source of parasitic infestations. It's better to purchase a soft plastic kiddie wading pool or a low sided stock tank so they can easily climb in and out. Dump the water regularly for their good health. Geese do require shade in hot months. Provide either trees, bushes or a tarp for shade purposes. Consider shading the drinking water also.

And thirdly, geese who are happy and well fed (remember to start the grain feeding in late fall) don't have the urge to migrate. In addition like most birds, geese are territorial. They like their place and tend to stay put. Some may fly around the farmstead upon occasion but they won't leave home-- or their flock for any extended time. Best of all handle your chicks, goslings as baby geese are called, daily. Feed them, pick them up, talk to them.
Recognizing you and your voice is critical to happy future interaction with your birds. This will tame them and they will recognize you uniquely as part of the flock, so they'll not charge or bite you when mature. Your goose can be expected to live about 18-20 years on average and will be able to raise goslings the majority of their long lives. In contrast chickens live about 10 to 12 years, on average.


Try them if you have the right environment, housing and access to feed. They are smart; you can train them with patience and persistence. And they are quite friendly when handled from their earliest days.

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Trees Are Food For Bees!

While there is increased concern for the lowly and yet the mighty honey bee, apis mellifera, at the same time there is increased destruction of the worker bees' habitat. Large scale farming, recently in the drive for profits, has plowed up more and more land, ripped out more stands of trees and replaced them with crops such as corn and soybeans.

The problem with corn, and to a lesser extent soybeans, is that as a cereal grain, like grasses, is  pollinated by the wind. No bees needed and their pollen, an essential nutrient for honey bees, is not food available for them.
As for soybeans which do flower and are pollinated by a wide variety of insects, the honey bee doesn't figure large in that number. Researchers theorize why, but are still uncertain as to the avoidance of this particular crop. There is some perception that honey bees will visit soybean fields, but it is also thought that they do not prefer them when other forage is available.

Most know that bees however love flowers! They do, and they work certain flowers heavily for both nectar which provides carbohydrates to the bees and pollen which is their protein.

Few people are aware that many species of trees are very important to bees for both nectar and pollen! If you keep bees or if you want to feed bees, consider trees in your landscape.

A list of important trees for bees in the mid-west United States:


Willows, all types, including the French Pussy Willows
Bee working a Linden tree in bloom.
Sumac, all types
Elm, all types,
Oaks
Ash
Tulip
Linden, all types
Fruit trees, all types
Nut trees, all types


And more...