Not creepy at all

So I finally took down the scarecrow and his ghost mantel. Rather than store the whole kit-n-caboodle somewhere inside, I removed the hat and clothes and set the chicken wire frame up in the woods. Not just any old where, but sitting on a branch, waiting for next year. The gray wire is really hard to see in pictures, so I took a video too.

Wire humanoid figure sitting on a branch in the woods. Not creepy at all.

I’ll peck your eye!

The Halloween pumpkins have gone to the chickens.

Chickens preparing to enjoy pumpkin

My chickens love pumpkin. I made sure to get the pumpkins out to their coop before any mold set in. I hung the smallest pumpkin, and put the others up on the bench, just to keep them off the ground and out of the droppings. Within hours each pumpkin had a hole dug through the decoration into the guts so the chickens could reach the seeds. Now we have a pumpkin grave yard!

Frozen

No Disney princesses here, just a particularly cold cold snap for Texas. We don’t usually see freezing temps until well into “winter” and heavy frost later than that, but heavy frost is what mother nature brought to us.

Our first frost was a heavy frost, almost looks like snow

I prepared this year: removed the hoses from the outside faucets; brought the sprinkler timers inside, covering the delicate plants we nearly lost last winter. I even tried to save the cucumbers. Then the freeze hit for two nights.

Cucumber area covered in freeze protecting fabric

At least I harvested three cucumbers, because the vines did not make it through the frost. I forgot about the nasturtiums and basil, both of which also succumbed to the cold. The lantana in the front looks great, though.

My chickens are loving it. They are all fluffy and active. Their outside water freezes, even with apple cider vinegar added, but once the ice is broken, they drink from it anyway. The coop stayed above freezing, so the water inside didn’t have ice (I don’t heat the coop).

Victory

Having vanquished his fears, he strode from the forest bearing the mantle of his victory.

Otherwise known as: Halloween is over, but I was too lazy to take the sheet all the way inside just yet. So… art!

Here is the first image, just in case you forgot:

Double Yolker

Our eggs have been averaging about 45g (which is a size “small” in the USA). We have had a couple reach up to 49g, but we were shocked with a relatively huge 61g (large) egg!

61g egg on left, 45g egg on right

We broke the egg open and it had a double yolk! Turns out this is most common with hens that are just starting to lay because their system hasn’t quite figured it all out yet. Or with older chickens nearing the end of their egg production. We obviously have the former.

Double yolk egg

Based on the camera footage, we think Jade is the layer of the double yolker, using the comb identification method.

Jade on the nest at 9:11
Egg and golf ball at 9:38