Category Archives: Farm Life

Vacuuming Grasshoppers

Anybody that has known us for a while, is generally aware that there is a grasshopper horde that plagues us every summer.  The grasshoppers are so thick that they jump up as we walk outside, and when they land, it sounds like rain.  While we do have some of the non-breeding Java chickens roaming in the garden for grasshopper control, we still have plenty of grasshoppers to spare.  And then some.  When walking outside and getting literally covered in grasshoppers, it is almost impossible not to think of various Bible stories involving locust plagues.

I was really getting frustrated with the windows on the back of the house being covered in so many grasshoppers that you could hardly see out.  GROSS!  While discussing the grasshopper plague, my friend Laurie up in Maine gave me an idea – get a shop vac and VACUUM THE GRASSHOPPERS and feed them to the chickens!

Upon mentioning this to the hubby, he dug around in the garage and found the small portable shop vac we have.  He promptly proceeded to the back of the house where the hoppers were congregating.  It took a bit to be able to get the rhythm down to sneak up on the hoppers and suck them up before they jumped away.  But he figured it out and was soon divesting our poor house of its obnoxious, annoying, disgusting, abhorrent hopper horde.

In the end, an estimated hundreds of grasshoppers were sucked up and then deposited into a chicken run.  At first, the chickens were really freaking out and didn’t know what to do with a huge pile of sluggish (dying) grasshoppers.  But after their initial alarm wore off – those chickens had a feast and went to bed that night with very full crops.

Moral of the story: If you find yourself with disgusting things like hordes of grasshoppers or maybe crickets, don’t underestimate the power of the lowly vacuum in your pest control plan!

 

Nature 101: Bull Snake

Come back here slippery snake.

It is very disconcerting when you’re following your husband into the house and he suddenly gets a serious look on his face, starts moving slowly, and keeps staring  at one particular location in the garage like there is a big problem…

We’d had our prized Java chickens free-ranging in the pasture while we were working outside, keeping the shotgun handy in case of predators (coyotes are quite brazen here even in daylight).  There was a little bit of daylight left but it was too late to start something else, so we headed inside.  Suddenly hubby hands me the shotgun he is carrying – and I’m worried.  Especially since he didn’t tell me what the problem was.  All I could think by the serious look on his face was Why in the world are you handing me the shotgun if there is such a serious problem?  By this time I’ve grabbed the shotgun and backed up several feet.  Hubby FINALLY blurts “Maybe Bull Snake” after staring at something for what seemed like an eternity.

A snake apparently discovered that a favorite snack, little field mice, enjoy the comforts of our garage.  Mr. Snake had stationed himself on top of an animal condo that had temporarily housed chickens, having curled himself in and out of the vent holes of a cardboard animal carrier.  Right next to the path into the kitchen.  ACK!

I don’t actually mind snakes unless they surprise me.  Or they are in my house where they don’t belong.  Like this one.  Hubby said he was glad that he’d actually had the day off so he could find our visitor instead of me – since I was likely to have had a cow (more like a whole herd of cows), if I had encountered our visitor first.

Mr. Snake stayed put long enough for me to snap some pics with my phone before trying to get away from the paparazzi.  At which point I made it clear to hubby he’d better catch that thing and get it OUT of my garage!  Like many people, we don’t keep cars in our garage.  The thought of that thing slithering behind something and waiting for another chance to scare me…

Hubby took Mr. Snake out of the garage for another photo op, then out to our dilapidated barn and let the thing slither off into the grass.  Hopefully Mr. Snake will figure out that the pasture is a much more appropriate place to be than in our garage.  I also hope that he ate the little mouse that nearly ran across my feet last week while walking through the garage.

After consultation of the reptile book, noting the usual range for snakes that have these types of colorings/markings, this snake is likely a bull snake (hubby’s first impression).  Although according to the book, a Texas rat snake might not be out of the question.  Either are good for rodent control.  And for scaring unsuspecting wives.

*Click on a photo for a closer look.

No snakes were harmed in the making of this story.  🙂

We live in peace with non-poisonous snakes here.  Even when they visit unannounced.  But then I guess they can’t announce themselves very well since they don’t have pockets to carry a calling card and we don’t have a butler or a silver tray with which to receive calling cards anyway.

 

 

 

 

 

Spring is Sproutin’

Close up of sprouting veggies and herbs
Mini greenhouse photo

The mini greenhouse. Who can resist buying one when it’s on sale AND encourages you to have fun playing with dirt?

Winter was weird.  Again.  The pond has gotten a little water back into it, but winter didn’t bring us nearly enough rain to fill the pond back up or help with the drought situation.  The frequent high winter winds did drop the wind chills and make it miserable to be outside, even if it wasn’t wet enough for a more normal Texas winter though.

Now that March is here, it is nice to start seeing a bit more sun and experience some mild Spring days.  Even if it isn’t officially spring yet.  (I won’t hold my breath that the mild pleasant temps will stay.  I am fully expecting it to be 90+ degrees starting in a few weeks.  As usual. :/ )  Even though the weather here isn’t always pleasing, it IS pleasing to see signs of spring sproutin’ in our new mini greenhouse!

For $20 on sale, I just couldn’t pass up the chance to buy this little mini greenhouse to see what it can do.  Hopefully it will be good not only for sprouting seeds, but to grow some things next winter.  Fresh winter tomatoes grown in a big pot sounds good.

There is something exciting about seeing the little sprouts popping their heads up to say hello.  We still have a few more things to plant (ok, more than a few cuz I tend to be a planting nut once I get started), but this is a pretty good start, considering we haven’t grown anything for several years. (Those evil grasshoppers just kept plotting against us and thwarted previous gardening efforts at this house.)  But, now that we have chickens that LOVE to eat grasshoppers, we figured it was time to  get back on the garden wagon.

Look but don’t taste the plants grasshoppers!  (Although I hope our chickens will taste a LOT of you hoppers!)  Cheers for Spring Sprouts!

 

 

Close up of sprouting veggies and herbs

Sprouting veggies and herbs!

Photo of more veggie/herb sprouts

More sprouting veggies and herbs!

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