Dun Hagan Gardening

A periodic rambling description of the homesteading activities at Dun Hagan.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Before the Fall

Last Friday Fall finally arrived here in Florida. The night time lows dipped into the fifties for a few nights and the day time highs have been staying at 90 or below mostly. It was time to get with it if I was going to get any cool season stuff planted.

The first photo is going to be the cool season garden. If you can make out the little orange flags they mark off the area (click the photo for a larger version as usual). I never plant as large a cool season garden as I do the warm season stuff and this year will be still smaller as I hope to be busy with some home repairs and improvements so won't have time to fool with a bigger one. Still should get at least five good rows in. The chicken manure laced shredded paper I forked out of the hen house last weekend largely disappears once it's tilled in though you can still see bits and pieces just yet. This coming weekend I hope to finish the second chicken tractor so I can split the new flock between the two then move them both out into the pasture where I want them until the winter forage is ready sometime in December or whenever we finally get our first frost.

The second photo is the corn patch. It hasn't been tilled in over two years and the chickens being in there for months had really caused the grass growth to take off so getting that sod well tilled turned into a real grudge match. The new knee brace worked well so my knee isn't bothering me at all tonight. It's my forearms that feel like I went best two out of three arm wrestling a gorilla! I did eventually get the whole thing done front to back then side to side to bust the sod up. There wasn't a trace of moisture in the dirt.

Weekend after next I'll spread the lime on it that I forgot to put down before I started today then till it one more time then broadcast the winter forage mix I'm planting for the chickens. It's a deer feed plot mix of rye, oats, and wheat, all varieties known to do well in Florida. I wanted to add some winter legumes, but when I wrote my extension agent for suggestions he laughed. The perils of living on the sand ridge it seems. I'm sure they'll be happy with the green feed they get.

I'll keep the birds in there until after our average last frost date by which time we should have some green stuff growing out in the orchard and pasture. Once that passes I'll move them out, turn up the corn patch then plant it to... corn! I'm hoping that a winter of 45 birds worth of chicken flickin's will be sufficient that I won't have to do much fertilizing. Of course I'll have to battle the squirrels and coons like last time, but I intend to launch a few preemptive strikes over the winter towards that end.

Vegetable gardenwise I'm thinking mustards, turnips, Vidalia type onions, and I'm going to try carrots again. Our winter weather last year was so non-typical that I don't think they really got a fair chance to perform.

.....Alan.

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Sunday, October 07, 2007

A-pear-ances can be deceiving

It's trying hard to be fall out there, it really is. It's just that the weather is not cooperating. The days are growing shorter. I have to do the morning chores in the dark now before I go to work. There is a different feel to the air. But it's still hitting 90 about every day, it's still humid, and (thankfully) it's raining fairly often now. Fall has been temporarily postponed until a date to be announced.

Warm weather or not life goes on. Arboreal thieves made off with my pears this year, but my brother's wife gifted me with three bags of sand pears that a friend had given her. They were dead ripe and going soft so I elected to make pear butter. I quartered the fruit then cooked them soft Friday night. Saturday before heading out to the Kinder Major's soccer game I ran them through the Victorio strainer to remove the seeds, skins, and grit cells and this morning I started cooking them down.

There was about a pint shy of two gallons of juice and pulp when I started and when I finished there was fourteen half-pints (3.5 quarts) of what tastes like the best pear butter I've made to date. I believe between the muscadine grape, strawberry, and peachs jams and this pear butter we're set for the year for biscuit and toast spread and some for Christmas gifts to boot.

If I'm lucky I'll receive another bag or three of pears this coming weekend too that I'll turn into plain old sauce. We're nearly out of the last batch.

The old hen flock have finally decided to get around to molting. They've been needing to for two months. Feathers all over the place as their new suits grow in. Hopefully egg production will back up again as well. The new flock are pretty well into their first laying cycle. Still about half of them laying pullet eggs but they're getting bigger by the day.

Didn't get the hen house cleaned out today like I wanted. Just as I was finishing up with the pear butter I looked out to see that it was raining so I started making the bread for the week. Naturally once I was committed the rain stopped, but that's Florida weather for you.

Fall and Winter will surely come one day and I'm growing more impatient by the day...

.....Alan.

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Monday, October 01, 2007

Three new Florida gardening related blogs added

I added three new Florida related gardening blogs to the links on the right hand side of the page this evening. They're all fairly new so not a lot to them just yet, but like a Florida garden they are sure to grow!

What? Which ones are they? I'm not going to tell you!

If you're not familiar enough with the current Florida gardening blogs to know which ones are new and which are not then you need to become familiar with them all! {laughing}

.....Alan (Two posts in one day!)

The Low Down on Grass Raised Eggs

The folks over to The Mother Earth News have been compiling some interesting data on the nutritional differences between grass-raised (for real free range) eggs and the standard factory eggs.

Meet Real Free-Range Eggs (Link to the article on the TMEN site.)

October/November 2007
Meet Real Free-Range Eggs
By Cheryl Long and Tabitha Alterman


The new results are in: Eggs from hens allowed to peck on pasture are a heck of a lot better than those from chickens raised in cages!

Most of the eggs currently sold in supermarkets are nutritionally inferior to eggs produced by hens raised on pasture. That’s the conclusion we have reached following completion of the 2007 Mother Earth News egg testing project. Our testing has found that, compared to official U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) nutrient data for commercial eggs, eggs from hens raised on pasture may contain:

• 1⁄3 less cholesterol
• 1⁄4 less saturated fat
• 2⁄3 more vitamin A
• 2 times more omega-3 fatty acids
• 3 times more vitamin E
• 7 times more beta carotene

These amazing results come from 14 flocks around the country that range freely on pasture or are housed in moveable pens that are rotated frequently to maximize access to fresh pasture and protect the birds from predators. We had six eggs from each of the 14 pastured flocks tested by an accredited laboratory in Portland, Ore. The chart at the end of this article shows the average nutrient content of the samples, compared with the official egg nutrient data from the USDA for “conventional” (i.e. from confined hens) eggs. The chart lists the individual results from each flock.

The 2007 results are similar to those from 2005, when we tested eggs from four flocks all managed as truly free range. But our tests are not the first to show that pastured eggs are more nutritious — see “Mounting Evidence” below for a summary of six studies that all indicated that pastured eggs are richer in nutrients than typical supermarket eggs.

We think these dramatically differing nutrient levels are most likely the result of the different diets of birds that produce these two types of eggs. True free-range birds eat a chicken’s natural diet — all kinds of seeds, green plants, insects and worms, usually along with grain or laying mash. Factory farm birds never even see the outdoors, let alone get to forage for their natural diet. Instead they are fed the cheapest possible mixture of corn, soy and/or cottonseed meals, with all kinds of additives — see “The Caged Hen’s Diet” below.

The conventional egg industry wants very much to deny that free-range/pastured eggs are better than eggs from birds kept in crowded, inhumane indoor conditions. A statement on the American Egg Board’s Web site says “True free-range eggs are those produced by hens raised outdoors or that have daily access to the outdoors.”

Baloney. They’re trying to duck the issue by incorrectly defining “true free-range.” And the USDA isn’t helping consumers learn the truth, either: “Allowed access to the outside” is how the USDA defines “free-range.” This inadequate definition means that producers can, and do, label their eggs as “free-range” even if all they do is leave little doors open on their giant sheds, regardless of whether the birds ever learn to go outside, and regardless of whether there is good pasture or just bare dirt or concrete outside those doors!

Both organizations need to come clean. True free-range eggs are those from hens that range outdoors on pasture, which means they can do what’s natural — forage for all manner of green plants and insects.

The Egg Board statement goes on to say: “The nutrient content of eggs is not affected by whether hens are raised free-range or in floor or cage operations.”

Again, that is hogwash. They think they can simply ignore the growing body of evidence that clearly shows that eggs are superior when the hens are allowed to eat their natural diet. Or maybe they think it’s OK to mislead the public to protect egg producers’ bottom line.

After we published our first report about the high nutrient levels in pastured eggs, the Egg Nutrition Council questioned our “suggestion” that pastured eggs were better in their Aug. 8, 2005, newsletter:

“Barring special diets or breeds, egg nutrients are most likely similar for egg-laying hens, no matter how they are raised.” There’s that double-speak, again: “Barring special diets ...” Since when are diets not a part of how chickens are raised? Come on, people, we’ve cited six studies (see "Mounting Evidence", below) showing that pastured eggs are better. The best you can say is “most likely” this evidence is wrong? Cite some science to support your assertions! The U.S. Poultry and Egg Association offers the same misleading statement on its Web site:

“What are free-range eggs? Free-range eggs are from hens that live outdoors or have access to the outdoors. The nutrient content of eggs from free-range hens is the same as those from hens housed in production facilities with cages.”

It’s amazing what a group can do with a $20 million annual budget. That’s what factory-farm egg producers pay to fund the AEB each year to convince the public to keep buying their eggs, which we now believe are substandard.

The Egg Board’s misleading claims about free-range/pastured eggs pervade the Internet, even though the Board has been aware of the evidence about the nutrient differences at least since our 2005 report. We found virtually the same (unsubstantiated) claim denying any difference in nutrient content on Web sites of the American Council on Science and Health (an industry-funded nonprofit), the Iowa Egg Council, the Georgia Egg Commission, the Alberta (Canada) Egg Producers, Hormel Foods, CalMaine Foods and NuCal Foods (“the largest distributor of shell eggs in the Western United States”).

But the most ridiculous online comments turned up at www.supermarketguru.com, a site maintained by a “food trends consultant.” It says:

“FREE RANGE: Probably the most misunderstood of all claims, it’s important to note that hens basically stay near their food, water and nests, and the idea of a happy-go-lucky bird scampering across a field is far from the natural way of life. The claim only means that the hens have access to the outdoors, not that they avail themselves of the opportunity. The hens produce fewer eggs so they are more expensive; higher product costs add to the price of the eggs. The nutrient content is the same as other eggs.”

If you’ve ever been around chickens, you know that whoever wrote that hasn’t. Chickens will spend almost their entire day ranging around a property scratching and searching for food. Even as tiny chicks, they are naturally curious and will begin eating grass and pecking curiously at any insects or even specks on the walls of their brooder box. “Scampering across a field,” looking for food, is precisely their natural way of life.

Supermarket Guru did get one thing right, though. Free-range/pastured eggs are likely to be more expensive because production costs are higher. As usual, you get what you pay for. If you buy the cheapest supermarket eggs, you are not only missing out on the valuable nutrients eggs should and can contain, you are also supporting an industrial production system that treats animals cruelly and makes more sustainable, small-scale egg production difficult.

You can raise pastured chickens easily right in your back yard — see our recent articles about how to do it here. Or you can find pastured eggs at local farmstands and farmers markets, or sometimes at the supermarket. Tell the store manager you want eggs from pastured hens, and encourage the manager to contact local producers. To find pastured producers near you, check out www.eatwild.com or www.localharvest.com

== == ==

Click on the Mother Earth News link at the top of this post to see the breakdown chart of the Free-range EggTest Results, 2007.

Some very suggestive evidence that not only do grass raised eggs look and taste better but they actually are better nutritionally as well.

.....Alan.

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