Re-learning silk screening

It all started with an innocent request, “Do we still have all that silk screen stuff?  If so I would like a t-shirt that says CERTIFIED PROFESSIONAL FRAUD.”
Certified Professional Fraud badge design.

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Milling a Sycamore Log

Sycamore Log

Sycamore Log

A couple years ago, we had a sycamore die, and had it cut down by a local tree service. I had the bole, about 20 feet long, left laying so that I could mill it up. It sat for a couple of years, and I decided it was time to mill it. I expect it will be fairly spalted.

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Laser Cut Chainmail

We’ve made costumes for years.  Whether for Halloween, or plays, or cosplay, we’ve made them.  One costume that Sam has wanted is Havel the Rock, from Dark Souls.  There will be more on this build later, but one of the pieces of armor builds is chainmail.  You can make authentic chainmail with metal rings, very painstaking.  Or you can try one of the different methods for making chainmail-like fabric, cloth, or other simulations.  We’ve tried cutting rings from pvc, but again, this is very painstaking.  I’ve tried 3D printed chainmail sheets, but this didn’t work very well.

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Update on the chicken feed

We started adding in the new layer and meat bird dry foods the week of March 13, 2023. Up to this point we had been getting 1 – 3 eggs per day and many days there would be no eggs at all. They get the new food in a fermented form every day and have been getting this for about a month. The weather had been nice, warmer, lots or rain but we still were getting sunny days here and there and the days are getting longer. The week that we started adding in the new food it was actually colder and cloudy with mixes of snow and rain just about everyday. I noticed that their “old” food was running low so I mixed up a five gallon bucket of half meat bird crumble and half layer pellets using the new foods. All information here has no scientific basis it is observational and perhaps even coincidental. I’ve added in 2 of those 5 gallon buckets mixes on top of the old food. They have had access to this for three days and are still getting their fermented food in the morning. It’s been to cold and miserably wet here all week for me to spend any quality time with them out in the yard so they have only had access to their larger fenced in area.

No matter where you stand on the theories going around about why egg production seems lower I think we can all agree that good nutrition makes a difference. Also time of year, molt, access to clean water, weather (extreme cold or heat), amount of light each day all play their own roles. Because we had such a dramatic increase in eggs and new food was the only real variable added this week I decided to look at the bags and here is what I found:

Old Food – Country Road Layer Pellets from Rural King
First five ingredients: Processed Grain By-Products, Grain Products, Calcium Carbonate, Plant Protein Products, Salt

New Layer Food – Kalmbach 17% Organic Layer
First five ingredients: Organic Corn, Organic Soybean Meal, Organic Wheat Middlings, Organic Wheat Flour, Organic Soybean Oil

New Meat Bird Food – Kalmbach 20% Organic Chick & Meatbird Starter Grower
First five ingredients: Organic Corn, Organic Soybean Meal, Organic Wheat Middlings, Organic Wheat Flour, Organic Soybean Oil

Now lets look at the analysis of each of the foods:

Country Roads Organic Layer Meatbird
Crude Protein (min) 16.0% 17.00% 20.00%
Lysine (min) 0.6% 0.88% 1.10%
Methionine (min) 0.25% 0.35% 0.45%
Crude Fat (min) 3.0% 3.00% 3.50%
Crude Fiber (max) 8.0% 5.00% 6.00%
Calcium (min) 3.5% 3.50% 0.80%
Calcium (max) 4.50% 1.30%
Phosphorus (min) 0.55% 0.50% 0.60%
Salt (min) 0.25% 0.20% 0.20%
Salt (max) 0.70% 0.70%
Sodium (min) 0.15%
Zinc 125 ppm
Manganese (Min) 125 ppm
Vitamin A (min) 5,000 IU/lb 6,000 IU/lb
Vitamin D (min) 2,000 IU/lb 2,000 IU/lb
Vitamin E (min) 20 IU/lb 30 IU/lb

The deck is definitely stacked against the old food with the two new ones teamed together so it’s not a fair fight.  While I cannot with 100% authority state that food changed the laying patterns I can with 100% authority state that I’m sure it did not hurt it any.   I can also say that the new food is a smaller bag at a higher price.  For us it was worth making the swap because doing all the work without getting eggs was making me sad.  I’m buying food, I’m hauling it home, I’m filling the feeders, I’m doing the water, I’m cleaning the coops, I’m investing in everything needed to keep them healthy and safe and not getting any eggs.  I was buying eggs at the grocery store.

A couple of other things to note there is a difference in the yolk color.  I cracked a store egg in the same bowl as a fresh egg and the color was eye popping.  Then I cracked an old food fresh egg into the same bowl with a new food egg and again saw a difference.  The new food is improving the shells.  I haven’t been adding calcium because in the past our chickens have never really had an issue with shells not being tough enough.  Here lately the shells have been so tender that just picking them up caused some of them to break.  I’ve noticed that in the last few days the shells have been stronger.

Summer will be coming on and the chickens will spend more time foraging for themselves.  They will also have more access to garden scraps.  All of that will again change their eggs and laying patterns.  For now I’m thinking we will stay with this new food.  We may make some adjustments like adding the foods for molting or feathers in when they are needed.  In the warm weather I will probably stop the meat bird food and maybe try some of the Henhouse Reserves.

If you want to know more about any of these products you can use these links to the spec sheets to read the full details on each one.

Kalmbach Meat Bird food

https://www.kalmbachfeeds.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/O1040.pdf

Kalmbach Layer food

https://www.kalmbachfeeds.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/O1117-new-2020.pdf

Country Roads layer food

https://www.ruralking.com/layer-pellet-feed-50lb-4671179

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Laser Cutting Garden Stakes

Today I’m cutting out some garden stakes on the laser. I’m using LightBurn for the cutting software, and my laser is a Comgrow Comgo Z1 10W LED Laser.

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I purchased a set of vector graphics of 84 different garden stakes from a seller on Etsy, Ivan Bilous, owner of VectorPainter. These are very nice graphics, and work very well. One change I made was for any internal cutout, I duplicated the paths and applied a different stroke color. This allowed me to create a different cutting profile in Lightburn.

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Learning Elementor and WordPress

We all have different opinions of what makes a good or bad website.  Like anything else it boils down to personnel preference.  For me the function has to come before form the majority of the time.  Our site has used an older WordPress theme since it was created and while it has served us there are things that we would like to do now that other themes might work better for.

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Update on the bedding

The bedding has been down now for 3 weeks and while official spring is a ways down the calendar we have already had seriously wet weeks.

So far I have to say I’m really pleased.  I put it down after we had several days of hard all day rain.  Things were already out of control in there. Continue reading

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A new look at an old project – The paperclip holder

Hello again friends of Borouz Woodworking as well as Wolf Studios! Sorry for the lack of a post last week, I had become busy with travels so I was unable to make one.

Now that I am back however I wanted to give a little view on one of the old, old, old projects that I had worked on when I was younger that I had forgotten about.

Back when I was younger and newer to woodworking one of the old projects I had done was with making a paperclip holder using a cap of wood and base of wood with a strong magnet inside of the cap to hold some paperclips.
Paper clip holder bases

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Change is for the birds re-deux

I’m a little late to the party but here we go.  We had been noticing that we just were not getting the eggs like we had been.  Now there are reasons for this:

  1. Lazy.  We just were not checking the boxes everyday and in the winter they freeze and burst and the girls, well, they get hungry and everybody likes chicken.
  2. The decrease in daylight.  Production just goes down as the days get shorter.
  3. Water.  During the summer they had watering cups in the run and your normal galvanized waterer out in the bigger open run.  When freezing started we took our rain barrel and added a fish tank heater and circulation pump which runs to a pvc pipe with nipples.  This prevents the water from freezing, keeps the water moving which keeps stagnation at bay and also keeps warm water constantly moving through the entire system.   The nipples might make them feel like they just are not able to get as much water as easily and eggs are mostly water.
  4. Stress.  In the winter things get boring we all feel the blues.  Plus a few months ago a guinea hen wandered up here from parts unknown.  We put her in the flock to keep her safe and waited to see if anyone came to claim her, they did not.  I think it stressed the flock out.

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Raised Bed Greenhouse Top

Raised Bed Greenhouse

Raised Bed Greenhouse

We would like to put up a greenhouse, but for the time being, we do not have one.  We’ve been researching crops you can plant early, and found that the brassicas are very frost and cold tolerant.  In fact, they do not like heat.

We started a flat of brassicas at the end of January, and have had to pot them up already.  They are to the point where they need to get in the ground.  With the warm winter we’ve had, we decided that rather than just potting them up again, we’d plant them in the raised bed across the driveway.  We toyed with just putting some kind of cold frame over it, but saw something similar to the one we built.

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