Hey guys! So I know a few folks are asking how we are doing after the flood last night. We are OK, but many of our neighbors are not and we’re trying to do as much as we can to help them right now. I’ll try to put out a better update soon, but just know our farm and animals are ok. ❤
Hey love your channel! Wanted to share with you, if you have Toby pee the perimeter vs Abby you’ll have more success with keeping coyotes and other predators away. Urine from females have hormones that attract male coyotes and even other predators (to challenge for territory). A males hormones will keep predators at bay more successfully (this also works for male/females in humans. A human females urine will attract predators). Also you’ll have more success claiming a swarm if you capture the queen and place her in a trap inside the new hive box. The bees will follow the queen and then after two days you can release the queen and the hive will stay in the boxes. You do great work though and really enjoy your content!
with the bees, your biggest mistake was to just sweep them inside the box without finding the queen. The bees are attracted to her pheromones and so if you managed to succeed to capture the queen and put here in the box, you would have managed to capture the swarm. But oh well, things happen, I'm sure you'll manage to do it next time.
Yea first step is to always find the queen. They make little plastic clips you can put her in and place inside the hive and the hive will follow her, then you can let her go once they settle in.
He had a lady over who explained that to him a few years ago. He has no connection to those bees. She showed him how to do it. e thought he would come out, swipe a bit, and presto, new content.He didn't even SEE that the bees were walking up the pole again. A sure sign that the Queen was not in the box. He has them and takes the honey but doesn't put any sort of care into it. He obviously didn't spot that the hive was about to split. He didn't see that new Queen cells were produced. A novice beekeeper can spot that. If he can't, he shouldn't keep bees. Perhaps it's better to have them if he has more time.
*@Gold Shaw Farm* 15:05 You *need* to clear out the grass nearby those beehives, ants might climb the grass & invade & exterminate the whole hive, or other nasty bugs can do the same. Idealy, the "feet" of the beehive should be standing in water, to further insulate the hives from invading bugs & stuff.
BEES: In the future, consider getting a queen cage and finding the queen. Cage her, and place her into the box to encourage the other bees to follow her in. They won’t leave if she’s there. If you can’t find her, don’t brush the bees into the box that way, as too many bees don’t make it into the box. Adding a bee attractant to the box may help. Lemongrass oil will attract bees. Place a few drops in the box, and they will be drawn to it. You can make a swarm lure that you can check by hanging a rag under a shelf-like structure. Soak the rag in beeswax and lemongrass oil, and the swarm can hang off the shelf and be easy to collect. To get them into the hive box, be VERY GENTLE!!! Scoop them with your hands, check each handful for the queen, and gently place them into the hive. If you get a lightweight plastic scoop (something from the recycling bin would do like a yogurt cup), that can be used to gather more bees in one scoop, if you want more than what your hand can gather. Those brushes can really beat up bees. A feather would be better. The way you were sweeping could kill the queen, or toss her into the grass. Best!!!
Yea on the bees, slow down and be more patient, loose the brush, look for the queen and slowly move the bees with your hands to the new box. Love your channel
I had two broody hens die on their nests a couple of summers ago. I put one in a box on paper towels and brought it in the house. Lo and behold, the bird was full of those nasty little mites that sparrows bring into the coop. The mites had essentially sucked too much blood out of the hens. Broody hens are a perfect target as they don't move off the nest but once or twice a day. I immediately cleaned and treated all the coops for mites and have maintained that regimen since. No problems since that summer! May your chickens in the pasture grow fat and happy and stay safe!!
I had this same thing happened to one of my hens when I first started out with my little flock of ladies. I was devastated and felt I failed her. She was really sweet. I go out of my way to make sure that it does not happen again. My girls are the best and just add so much life to my property. Never a dull moment with them :)
It could be too they were just too old. Broodiness is hard on thier body. the reduce eating and drinking can take its toll. Being older their body may not of had the strength.
My dog loves to watch your farm videos. She loves all the animals. Sometimes she moves closer to the screen when the animals are in the full screen close up shots, she gets off the chair and stands closer to the tv. So cute! Morgan, you have one of the best vlogs on TH-cam!
Hello Morgan! if you want to catch the swarm and have a high success rate, take a frame with an open larva without bees from another hive and place it on the swarm, the queen and many other bees will run to protect the larva, once the frame is filled with bees you place it in the empty hive. It is one of the ways we use in Greece.
If you mounted a pair of truck side view mirrors to the mobile coop, it might help you line it up with the trailer hitch. Or a camera that you could monitor from your phone - sort of a DIY backup camera.
Free range chickens should be fine as long as they are still locked up at night. But you can go the extra mile and place random tall posts in the ground then screw on a couple crossmembers as makeshift trees/ high perches for the chickens to flap up to and escape ground predators. Like mini power poles With the shade wagon, maybe try something like a more solid wall or shade cloth wall, as the sun travels one side will always be in the shade and grows as the sun moves. But yeah you can make good extra shade by utilising vertical area. Imagine a set of goal posts with shade mesh strung between the posts all the way up. Takes up next to no ground room, same as a fence line, but can create lots of shade.
You still got a lot to learn from the way you tried to get your bees inside. You could've gotten balls of bees with your gloves and gently put them inside the box instead of brushing them like that like you are trying to scrape something off your fence. They were all agitated and you most likely missed the queen bee. I'm guessing they still get you nervous from the way I saw you brushing them into the box.
Love me some mulberries, as a little girl I used to sit in my neighbors tree for hours eating them, they were very tasty! More Cochin babies, they are adorable. Maybe Scooter should be a name for the baby duckling, he certainly scoots around a lot,lol. Thanks Morgan for the update, looks like all is well at the farm.👍🐝🐕💕🦆🐥🐣🐓🌱🌿
I really enjoyed this video, Morgan. I’m realizing just how much work and planning goes into filming one small segment, eg. The bee rehousing one. As a person with planning and initiation challenges, I applaud you for adding more mental and physical work to your day for our entertainment and education. From the one who always thought farm life would be great.
In Poland, we spray the swarms with water. No bees will be harmed in the process, but they are compact so it's easier to throw them into the bucket and they don't fly around as much when sprayed. You can also throw all the bees on the ground, put a hive in front of them, and they should come in on their own if the interior is well made (Full frames, not a hose to build)
You should take the extra effort to mark your queens so that if they swarm you can find them easier. The bees go wherever the queen is so if she isn't in the box, they won't stay.
After you swept most of the bees into the new hive, did you not sit back and watch to see what they would do? If they continued to swarm an area outside the hive, then you could have searched that area for queen. I feel like just sweeping them in & hoping you got the queen was not the best plan.😅
one thing i could recommend for your cattle are fly masks!! they help keep flies out of the cows eyes, while they can still see through them :) i dont know if theres a kind for highland breed, or it theres a kind for calves, but its still worth a shot!
Every bee relocation video I've seen, including one done on your farm, involved first catching the queen and placing her in a isolation clip before trying to move the rest of the bees into the box.
Hi Morgan! I hope your day is going great! If you stick a couple of rear view mirrors on your barn vehicle (like bicycle mirrors, for example) it will make centering the trailer hitch on the trailer really easy. I really enjoy your videos, thanks so much!
It sure is great to see you using these "organic" methods of farming/ranching. Wish more people did. You explaining it will help a lot of people understand their world better. Keep up the excellent work!
I've had bees in the past . First I always kept a empty hive close by. Plus it looks as if you have all newish frames when capturing a sworn throw a couple of combs full of honey so as to make the new hive more inviting.
This video is so real and eye-opening! I truly admire your honesty in sharing both the challenges and rewards of farm life. The balance of life, death, and even dealing with bugs shows the resilience and dedication it takes to run a farm. Thank you for such a heartfelt and educational perspective!
15:03 their peeps mean something. This one was either danger or not happy and calling for mom. First week you should always listen to peeps for danger or in trouble ❤
Also you should be adding more boxes to the hives throughout the year so the bees have more room. You can even harvest honey several times throughout the year so long as you leave enough in the fall for winter. The bees don't really need it until then.
My neighbor decided he needed a fancy backyard and used so much pesticide and weed killer we lost 80% of our mason bee population, which was at least 1,000. Poisons used don’t only kill the pests people are after in their own yards. Fly paper great idea.
I'm really sorry about Bette! But I love the new tiny weird chickens. And that is a very wise-looking duckling. I'm glad that you left that food dish as its comfort place.
The easiest way to pick mulberries is to place a sheet under the tree, then shake the branches above the sheet. The ripe mulberries will fall on the sheet, easy peasy.
Nice inside edition, please make sure there are no nails sticking up on the loose boards inside the new Cluck Hotel. Thanks for the variety of content.😅
You need some queen clips and when you get swarms you can find the queen put her in the clip and place that in the hive and the bees will then stay in the hive
That’s how you do it. Put the queen, captured in the clip in the hive suspended between two frames, keeping the lid ajar. Later that evening close the hive and move it to your apiary. 48 hours later , gently release the queen into the hive, good chance she will stay. Also putting a loaded feeder frame in at time of capture will help. I have had success with this method five times this year. Oh, loose the brush. Use your hands and scoop the bees one layer at a time onto a frame, scan for the queen on the frame , shake the bees into the hive or alternate to different frames until you see the queen on a frame and clip her.
Up North do you have flycatcher species that you can attract to your fields with birdhouses? Also are there bats? Bat houses are easy to make and the bats eat a lot of bugs.
In my area we use mulberry trees as a kind of sacrificial crop around orchards (in or near fence lines), as most leaf munching bugs prefer them over any other kind of fruit tree. They're strong enough to fruit despite getting covered in aphids and various kinds of caterpillars, but few people actually harvest mulberries beyond picking a few to eat fresh from the tree. If you have the patience to pick a few pounds you can freeze them for smoothies or let them ferment with a touch of honey to make "mulberry wine", a fragrant beverage more akin to a vermouth / fortified wine, with as much as 20% alcohol content (without adding distilled spirits) and possibly some (unproven) medicinal properties.
Understanding the bees are an afterthought.............but PLEASE string trim around the hives so they can get in and out without getting stuck in the grass. Helps deter any rodents too who might move in on a weak hive.
There was nice moments! It looks like you still have to learn more about bees. That duckling is so special! Thanks for telling us about mulberries, I'd try one.
@goldshawfarm my two year old loves to yell “release the quacken“. Any plans on releasing a shirt like that? And my wife is curious about a cow shirt from gold Shaw farms as well. Love the content. We all look forward to the releases
One of my fave mulberry dishes is to fill a bowl with them, pour enough half n half on them to almost cover them, toss one or two tablespoons of suger on them, stir till the half n half is purple, and dig in!
MORGAN, This is RJ... You said that this summer is drier than usual. Well, after yesterday, with all the rain you got causing many roads to wash away and restricting travel in the area, you know have a wet summer again like last year on the same day...
You don't talk about the 🐝🐝🐝 enough! ❤❤❤ Sweep gentler, slower.... move like you are walking through jello when dealing with a swarm. 🧘♂️🧘🏼♂️🧘🏿♂️🧘♂️
Another channel, Farmer Tyler Ranch, set up a cattle sprayer to help with flies and found filling it with water and dish soap seemed to work really well - the sprayer is positioned so the cows have to walk through it to get to their water. Recently he set up a cow brush and a rub so the cows had somewhere to rub the flies off off their backs and faces
If you can isolate the queen into a queen clip and place her into the new hive you will have much higher success rates with establishing new hives. Better luck on the next one!
Once the predators realize there's a chicken dinner on the range, they will come. You're generally OK until they see an easier, plumper, fatter dinner among your chickens than elsewhere.
Duckling name nomination - "Duckling Dew-Right " which is of course a cheesy take off from the classic Bullwinkle & Rocky cartoon series " Dudley Do-Right " cartoon from the 1970's.
I think you should put the poultry netting up! Predators and chicks will roam off. Too many others have found that not using the netting is NOT GOOD! 😊🐓🐓
You should try a harvest bucket, Johnny seed carries one. they have an X strap that goes over your back so you have both hands free to pick. I put cardboard quart baskets inside so the small fruit doesn't get crushed
Highland cattle are naturally friendly animals who generally are interested in human interaction. Charolais tend to be more independent and while they are docile, they can get really temperamental. I'm not surprised the Alice B is a little more standoffish than Bea.
Great to see the pigs. Glad to see the weird chickens have 5 new chicks! I hope your chickenduck has duck friends soon. Michigan has a lot of Mulberry bushes, even trees in a park near a former home. I have had a few grow up around our new house, but apparently all male; no berries in 5 years. I need to find a berry bush, plant a few more and put them in a few different spots until one has berries!
Hey guys! So I know a few folks are asking how we are doing after the flood last night. We are OK, but many of our neighbors are not and we’re trying to do as much as we can to help them right now. I’ll try to put out a better update soon, but just know our farm and animals are ok. ❤
O'man do i like Mulberries and Thanks Morgan you video are good in a lot if ways.....
Old F-4 II Shoe🇺🇸
Very glad to hear that. I hope everything works out for your neighbors. 💖💖💖
@@piratejennish42 Glad to hear you’re all ok. Let us know if your neighbors need any help that we can give.
❤
Hey love your channel! Wanted to share with you, if you have Toby pee the perimeter vs Abby you’ll have more success with keeping coyotes and other predators away. Urine from females have hormones that attract male coyotes and even other predators (to challenge for territory). A males hormones will keep predators at bay more successfully (this also works for male/females in humans. A human females urine will attract predators).
Also you’ll have more success claiming a swarm if you capture the queen and place her in a trap inside the new hive box. The bees will follow the queen and then after two days you can release the queen and the hive will stay in the boxes.
You do great work though and really enjoy your content!
with the bees, your biggest mistake was to just sweep them inside the box without finding the queen. The bees are attracted to her pheromones and so if you managed to succeed to capture the queen and put here in the box, you would have managed to capture the swarm. But oh well, things happen, I'm sure you'll manage to do it next time.
That's was my thought watching it but I know nothing about bees.
I thought the same thing.
I bet she was in the group that was still on the fence that he didn't get and they left
Yea first step is to always find the queen. They make little plastic clips you can put her in and place inside the hive and the hive will follow her, then you can let her go once they settle in.
@@noxyoshi I was looking at that bunch at the junction of the fence rail and post thinking, "Gently examine there."
He had a lady over who explained that to him a few years ago. He has no connection to those bees. She showed him how to do it. e thought he would come out, swipe a bit, and presto, new content.He didn't even SEE that the bees were walking up the pole again. A sure sign that the Queen was not in the box. He has them and takes the honey but doesn't put any sort of care into it. He obviously didn't spot that the hive was about to split. He didn't see that new Queen cells were produced. A novice beekeeper can spot that. If he can't, he shouldn't keep bees. Perhaps it's better to have them if he has more time.
*@Gold Shaw Farm*
15:05 You *need* to clear out the grass nearby those beehives, ants might climb the grass & invade & exterminate the whole hive, or other nasty bugs can do the same.
Idealy, the "feet" of the beehive should be standing in water, to further insulate the hives from invading bugs & stuff.
BEES:
In the future, consider getting a queen cage and finding the queen.
Cage her, and place her into the box to encourage the other bees to follow her in.
They won’t leave if she’s there.
If you can’t find her, don’t brush the bees into the box that way, as too many bees don’t make it into the box.
Adding a bee attractant to the box may help.
Lemongrass oil will attract bees.
Place a few drops in the box, and they will be drawn to it.
You can make a swarm lure that you can check by hanging a rag under a shelf-like structure.
Soak the rag in beeswax and lemongrass oil, and the swarm can hang off the shelf and be easy to collect.
To get them into the hive box, be VERY GENTLE!!!
Scoop them with your hands, check each handful for the queen, and gently place them into the hive.
If you get a lightweight plastic scoop (something from the recycling bin would do like a yogurt cup), that can be used to gather more bees in one scoop, if you want more than what your hand can gather.
Those brushes can really beat up bees. A feather would be better.
The way you were sweeping could kill the queen, or toss her into the grass.
Best!!!
1. Duck Norris
2. Quackie Chan
3. Duckleberry Finn
4. Quacky Balboa
5. Lord/Lady Paddleton
McWebfoot, Keeper of the Lake
😅😅 Absolutely Duck Norris 😂😂
These are very good!
😂 I love your very creative suggestions. 😅
Nailed it
Morgan is quite knowledgeable about his bees. Must be the queen wasn’t there?
Yea on the bees, slow down and be more patient, loose the brush, look for the queen and slowly move the bees with your hands to the new box. Love your channel
You need to get the queen, put it in a queen trap and place it in the box. Source, me, a professional Vaalheim beekeeper who's bees are always happy!
Bahaha to wish Minecraft was as informative
I had two broody hens die on their nests a couple of summers ago. I put one in a box on paper towels and brought it in the house. Lo and behold, the bird was full of those nasty little mites that sparrows bring into the coop. The mites had essentially sucked too much blood out of the hens. Broody hens are a perfect target as they don't move off the nest but once or twice a day. I immediately cleaned and treated all the coops for mites and have maintained that regimen since. No problems since that summer! May your chickens in the pasture grow fat and happy and stay safe!!
I had this same thing happened to one of my hens when I first started out with my little flock of ladies. I was devastated and felt I failed her. She was really sweet. I go out of my way to make sure that it does not happen again. My girls are the best and just add so much life to my property. Never a dull moment with them :)
It could be too they were just too old. Broodiness is hard on thier body. the reduce eating and drinking can take its toll. Being older their body may not of had the strength.
My dog loves to watch your farm videos. She loves all the animals. Sometimes she moves closer to the screen when the animals are in the full screen close up shots, she gets off the chair and stands closer to the tv. So cute!
Morgan, you have one of the best vlogs on TH-cam!
My dog used to LOVE watching Toby dog.
Hello Morgan! if you want to catch the swarm and have a high success rate, take a frame with an open larva without bees from another hive and place it on the swarm, the queen and many other bees will run to protect the larva, once the frame is filled with bees you place it in the empty hive. It is one of the ways we use in Greece.
Your artistry in filming simple day-to-day videos is off the hook.
I love how you are managing all the systems to benefit each other in the thoughtful, ecological way.
The duck's name is clearly 'Chicken'.
I love this 😂
Chicken little?
CL…that’s a cutest names 4 a duck 😆
Love the view inside the coop while moving them! Hysterical watching them try to stay on their roosts!
If you mounted a pair of truck side view mirrors to the mobile coop, it might help you line it up with the trailer hitch. Or a camera that you could monitor from your phone - sort of a DIY backup camera.
Free range chickens should be fine as long as they are still locked up at night. But you can go the extra mile and place random tall posts in the ground then screw on a couple crossmembers as makeshift trees/ high perches for the chickens to flap up to and escape ground predators. Like mini power poles
With the shade wagon, maybe try something like a more solid wall or shade cloth wall, as the sun travels one side will always be in the shade and grows as the sun moves.
But yeah you can make good extra shade by utilising vertical area. Imagine a set of goal posts with shade mesh strung between the posts all the way up. Takes up next to no ground room, same as a fence line, but can create lots of shade.
Our free range chickens were locked up at night, safe from nocturnal threats. One by one they were picked off by raptors....
Omgoodness those baby chicks are sooooo cute!!! Can't wait till the next video to watch them grow!!! Love you Morgan!!!
When a hen dies while sitting on eggs, it's usually due to mites. So you should check your coop for mites.
You still got a lot to learn from the way you tried to get your bees inside. You could've gotten balls of bees with your gloves and gently put them inside the box instead of brushing them like that like you are trying to scrape something off your fence. They were all agitated and you most likely missed the queen bee. I'm guessing they still get you nervous from the way I saw you brushing them into the box.
It was so frustrating to watch, I understand it’s his first time but he could have watched videos on how it’s done anyway it’s all good
Yes. He was crazy rough with them.
Love me some mulberries, as a little girl I used to sit in my neighbors tree for hours eating them, they were very tasty! More Cochin babies, they are adorable. Maybe
Scooter should be a name for the baby duckling, he certainly scoots around a lot,lol. Thanks Morgan for the update, looks like all is well at the farm.👍🐝🐕💕🦆🐥🐣🐓🌱🌿
Perfect name.....scooter Indeed.
I really enjoyed this video, Morgan. I’m realizing just how much work and planning goes into filming one small segment, eg. The bee rehousing one. As a person with planning and initiation challenges, I applaud you for adding more mental and physical work to your day for our entertainment and education. From the one who always thought farm life would be great.
Bro really threw that swarm catch by not caging the queen first lol.
In Poland, we spray the swarms with water. No bees will be harmed in the process, but they are compact so it's easier to throw them into the bucket and they don't fly around as much when sprayed. You can also throw all the bees on the ground, put a hive in front of them, and they should come in on their own if the interior is well made (Full frames, not a hose to build)
That's a good idea! If you can't find the Queen, that would make it easier. I was thinking more smoke but you can't quickly do both but so well.
You should take the extra effort to mark your queens so that if they swarm you can find them easier. The bees go wherever the queen is so if she isn't in the box, they won't stay.
After you swept most of the bees into the new hive, did you not sit back and watch to see what they would do? If they continued to swarm an area outside the hive, then you could have searched that area for queen. I feel like just sweeping them in & hoping you got the queen was not the best plan.😅
one thing i could recommend for your cattle are fly masks!! they help keep flies out of the cows eyes, while they can still see through them :) i dont know if theres a kind for highland breed, or it theres a kind for calves, but its still worth a shot!
Every bee relocation video I've seen, including one done on your farm, involved first catching the queen and placing her in a isolation clip before trying to move the rest of the bees into the box.
You gotta find the queen and then the rest will follow.
Hi Morgan! I hope your day is going great! If you stick a couple of rear view mirrors on your barn vehicle (like bicycle mirrors, for example) it will make centering the trailer hitch on the trailer really easy. I really enjoy your videos, thanks so much!
the fly traps are back , YAY ! thats my favorite segment , kinds creepy of me i know ! i HATE flies !
I use geese to protect my chickens, hatched out geese raised with chickens have served well as they seem to claim them a family members.
piggies looking great, I knew you would repeat every year, they are such an easy animal to have in your setup
Every time I see a video of your daily experiences I am in Awe!!! Amazing job Morgan!
It sure is great to see you using these "organic" methods of farming/ranching. Wish more people did. You explaining it will help a lot of people understand their world better. Keep up the excellent work!
Since that duckling is a singleton, you could name it Han Solo :P
❤ Great idea for a name! ❤
Hen Solo.
Maybe you need a guard goose up there with the chickens they seem to protect against the predator birds
I've had bees in the past . First I always kept a empty hive close by. Plus it looks as if you have all newish frames when capturing a sworn throw a couple of combs full of honey so as to make the new hive more inviting.
This video is so real and eye-opening! I truly admire your honesty in sharing both the challenges and rewards of farm life. The balance of life, death, and even dealing with bugs shows the resilience and dedication it takes to run a farm. Thank you for such a heartfelt and educational perspective!
15:03 their peeps mean something. This one was either danger or not happy and calling for mom. First week you should always listen to peeps for danger or in trouble ❤
You should also put the owl on the new coop. Help with birds of prey getting the chickens
Also you should be adding more boxes to the hives throughout the year so the bees have more room. You can even harvest honey several times throughout the year so long as you leave enough in the fall for winter. The bees don't really need it until then.
Looks like you might be getting scrambled eggs after that journey to move the chicken coop!
Very,very good video, Morgan! Well thought out and complete. I love the joy your farm gives. Thank you for producing these videos!🐝🪰🐔🐓🐽
Just woke up to a terrible dream, happy I now get watch your video and feel better!
Hey, Morgan, have you thought of adding chicken seatbelts in the chicken tractor? LOL!🤣
My neighbor decided he needed a fancy backyard and used so much pesticide and weed killer we lost 80% of our mason bee population, which was at least 1,000. Poisons used don’t only kill the pests people are after in their own yards. Fly paper great idea.
I'm really sorry about Bette! But I love the new tiny weird chickens. And that is a very wise-looking duckling. I'm glad that you left that food dish as its comfort place.
Appreciate your insight about the insects being part of the “farm”… So much going on with all the eggs hatching…
Best farm youtuber
The weird chicken army is growing once again!!
Lavender's chicks are so cute. When you get your incubator can you try to hatch Bette's eggs.
The easiest way to pick mulberries is to place a sheet under the tree, then shake the branches above the sheet. The ripe mulberries will fall on the sheet, easy peasy.
Hello from West Virginia. Love watching your videos. My Toby Dog book is supposed to be here Saturday. Take care
Nice inside edition, please make sure there are no nails sticking up on the loose boards inside the new Cluck Hotel. Thanks for the variety of content.😅
The chicks with the hairy legs is the best thing to I've seen today 😊 (and it's the evening here) 😅😊
You need some queen clips and when you get swarms you can find the queen put her in the clip and place that in the hive and the bees will then stay in the hive
That’s how you do it. Put the queen, captured in the clip in the hive suspended between two frames, keeping the lid ajar. Later that evening close the hive and move it to your apiary. 48 hours later , gently release the queen into the hive, good chance she will stay. Also putting a loaded feeder frame in at time of capture will help. I have had success with this method five times this year.
Oh, loose the brush. Use your hands and scoop the bees one layer at a time onto a frame, scan for the queen on the frame , shake the bees into the hive or alternate to different frames until you see the queen on a frame and clip her.
So glad you have chicks this year!
Gorgeous Lavender Silkie mum & chicks, RIP little Bette, it's redmite season 😥🐔
A productive day on the farm. I’m nervous but curios how the chickens will do without the electric netting. Hope it works out.
Up North do you have flycatcher species that you can attract to your fields with birdhouses? Also are there bats? Bat houses are easy to make and the bats eat a lot of bugs.
In my area we use mulberry trees as a kind of sacrificial crop around orchards (in or near fence lines), as most leaf munching bugs prefer them over any other kind of fruit tree. They're strong enough to fruit despite getting covered in aphids and various kinds of caterpillars, but few people actually harvest mulberries beyond picking a few to eat fresh from the tree.
If you have the patience to pick a few pounds you can freeze them for smoothies or let them ferment with a touch of honey to make "mulberry wine", a fragrant beverage more akin to a vermouth / fortified wine, with as much as 20% alcohol content (without adding distilled spirits) and possibly some (unproven) medicinal properties.
I pick them for my parrots
He's so gentle with his flock, that's why Toby is a superstar.
I really really enjoy watching your films - more please!
Understanding the bees are an afterthought.............but PLEASE string trim around the hives so they can get in and out without getting stuck in the grass. Helps deter any rodents too who might move in on a weak hive.
You should try to plant white mulberries. They are wonderful.
Your chickens riding in the coop is hilarious but it makes me hold my breath..lol
Omg! Adorable chicks! ❤😊
There was nice moments! It looks like you still have to learn more about bees. That duckling is so special! Thanks for telling us about mulberries, I'd try one.
My son is SO excited for kid sizes! Hes wanted a shirt for a while he can’t wait!
You should just build a minimum stall on the pasture where they all can lay underneath the shade and you don’t have to move it back and forth.
You need to get a wire mesh over the doors of your mobile coop. That white screen cloth is not predator proof.
Hashem says your the best .....Ty for teaching. Both of you Brother and Sister Hashem is good. In you
@goldshawfarm my two year old loves to yell “release the quacken“. Any plans on releasing a shirt like that? And my wife is curious about a cow shirt from gold Shaw farms as well. Love the content. We all look forward to the releases
Love how you say it is your "costume". Good chuckle.
One of my fave mulberry dishes is to fill a bowl with them, pour enough half n half on them to almost cover them, toss one or two tablespoons of suger on them, stir till the half n half is purple, and dig in!
The bees look a tad angry being shifted from the post to the hive.
Still waiting for more Farmdog moments of Zen please!
Edit; Duck name: Donald or Darkwing Duck
'way up north we prefer saskatoon berries b/c mulberries are outside our growing zone.
MORGAN, This is RJ...
You said that this summer is drier than usual. Well, after yesterday, with all the rain you got causing many roads to wash away and restricting travel in the area, you know have a wet summer again like last year on the same day...
Inside the chicken coop when youre moving it reminded me of lucy ball in the movie 'The Long, Long Trailer'
If coyotes are your main concern, get a guard donkey. It won't bond to the chickens, but it will run off coyotes.
It seems to me you like this batch of pigs more than the ones from last year.
You don't talk about the 🐝🐝🐝 enough! ❤❤❤ Sweep gentler, slower.... move like you are walking through jello when dealing with a swarm. 🧘♂️🧘🏼♂️🧘🏿♂️🧘♂️
Loved seeing Abby on the pasture.
dewey duck is my suggestion for that cute grey duckling 🥰🥰🥰
Another channel, Farmer Tyler Ranch, set up a cattle sprayer to help with flies and found filling it with water and dish soap seemed to work really well - the sprayer is positioned so the cows have to walk through it to get to their water. Recently he set up a cow brush and a rub so the cows had somewhere to rub the flies off off their backs and faces
Have you tried harvesting the mulberries by putting down a tarp and shaking a branch?
Nice to see the bees again. I would love to see a video about how you collect honey from the bees.
The newest caw is absolutely beautiful
You are very informative! Thank you so much!
If you can isolate the queen into a queen clip and place her into the new hive you will have much higher success rates with establishing new hives. Better luck on the next one!
Once the predators realize there's a chicken dinner on the range, they will come. You're generally OK until they see an easier, plumper, fatter dinner among your chickens than elsewhere.
Duckling name nomination - "Duckling Dew-Right " which is of course a cheesy take off from the classic Bullwinkle & Rocky cartoon series " Dudley Do-Right " cartoon from the 1970's.
I think you should put the poultry netting up! Predators and chicks will roam off. Too many others have found that not using the netting is NOT GOOD! 😊🐓🐓
You should try a harvest bucket, Johnny seed carries one. they have an X strap that goes over your back so you have both hands free to pick. I put cardboard quart baskets inside so the small fruit doesn't get crushed
Thanks for the updates..❤❤❤😊
i love mulberries :) When we were kids we raised silkworms, and we fed them mulberry leaves.
Highland cattle are naturally friendly animals who generally are interested in human interaction. Charolais tend to be more independent and while they are docile, they can get really temperamental. I'm not surprised the Alice B is a little more standoffish than Bea.
Have you ever checked the cattle for bot fly larvae! They burrow down into the flesh and grow huge. And are painful.
Great to see the pigs. Glad to see the weird chickens have 5 new chicks! I hope your chickenduck has duck friends soon. Michigan has a lot of Mulberry bushes, even trees in a park near a former home. I have had a few grow up around our new house, but apparently all male; no berries in 5 years. I need to find a berry bush, plant a few more and put them in a few different spots until one has berries!