This is what it looks like outside. It's so hard to water chickens in the winter. I use a garden hose to fill my heated buckets and drain them out really good so they don't freeze. Well it froze a couple days ago and I had to drag 50' of hose into the house and let it thaw. That hose is heavy! The birds go through so much water that I have to fill the the buckets about every other day, brrrr! On goes my snowmobile suit and out I go. My gloves almost always get wet trying to hook up the hose, oh brother. Plus, Flipper and Buddy take a bath in their water and slobber food into it so I have to dump their bucket and rinse it every couple days. I guess it could be worse.
My blackberries. So very cold.
On another note, I love this gate, I forget where I found this picture. I really want a gate and fence like this.
Also, I want my garden to look like this. Karl, over at pile of o'melys gardens like this.I hope we can do this this spring.
I love this cute little picture.Anyways, see I got nothing, every time I watch the weather I'm always hoping for warmer temps. I think we may get 40 degrees for one day, tomorrow then it's back to the 20's.
I am so excited to hatch some eggs that I can't think.


Here is the back of the large ugly pantry.
Now the paneling is removed and Kevin is unhooking the electric boxes and switches.
Most of it gone.






This turkey decided to hang out on the frame to our shade tent.
We had a foot of snow and -11 degree temperatures but nothing fazes our big hairy monster of a dog. She laid there for a while (quite a while) and the snow
She brings it right in and shakes it off in the house, nice!
(Back to the kitchen.) Now the pantry is all gone and here is the beam in place.

Kinda something like this.


This was what my looked like bedroom, thankfully I can say WAS!












My beautiful Mama chicken and three of her babies were killed. She must have died trying to protect her babies. There was blood splattered all over the chicken house, up the wall and all over. And this happened on the side of the fence closest to the house. She was left in the small chicken house while her babies were dragged to the fence and partially eaten. She was laying on her side with her eyes closed and her neck all bitten up.
Here they are when they were chicks, so cute and fun to watch.
It was so strange. The creature would drag the chickens it had killed to the fence and just eat the head off and leave the body there. Really weird. If it was a raccoon, we couldn't understand how the fence was not shocking it. Plus there was a chicken killed before Thanksgiving that we had dropped by the back of the barn and forgotten about. The creature had drug it into the barn and pulled it behind the woodpile into a really small space. Was it a possum? We had found a possum in the barn before. We could not figure it out! A possum was not fast enough to catch a running chicken.
Look at the teeth marks it left.

Look how it has a hopping gait. You would think it was a bunny but no bunnies have fangs like in the first picture. After much research we thought we knew what it was. There is one animal whose back feet land in front of it's front feet like in the picture. We have not heard of or nor have we seen any of sign these animals being around here at all. We know it's possible but rare.



Very busy varmint.
He set up a couple box traps near it's trails (even though we had set them many times before and it had avoided them) and he also set up one trap that would not fail. He found a narrow opening that it had been traveling through and set the trap there, securing it well.
