Sandra Madden

+ Follow
since Apr 27, 2021
Merit badge: bb list bbv list
For More
Mead, Oklahoma
Apples and Likes
Apples
Total received
In last 30 days
0
Forums and Threads

Recent posts by Sandra Madden

We love our KuneKunes! They're smaller, friendly, hardy, grazing, slow growth lard pigs, and their meat is especially prized for charcuterie.
4 years ago
Blanche has always been a little "extra waddley" and slower than the other ducks in our flock. But last week I noticed that she was just sitting/laying and not slurping in puddles or chasing bugs like everyone else, and often left behind when they moved on to new spots around the yard. Upon further inspection, I saw that she had a big ol sore on her foot.

At that point I separated her and started 2x daily 15-min soaks in epsom salts. I got the black scab off of her pad and some off the toe. I'm not sure the toe is bumblefoot -- it looks like the nail got torn off at some point, and when I try to remove the black "scab" it doesn't remove, just bleeds. The pad did not have a "kernel" in it, it was already flattened and floppy when I got to it and from the after picture seems to be doing pretty well. After the soak, I apply antiseptic spray to the foot and a piece of gauze, and then wrap the foot in vet wrap. She doesn't seem to mind it too much.

My concern now is that the entire foot including the webbing feels warm to the touch even after soaking in cool water, but there's no sign of infection or discoloration. She also isn't really eating much, if anything. She even ignored the mealworms I put on her food. I've got her isolated in a meat bird tractor that just happens to be empty right now, but it's near her friends and they stay fairly close by and check on her regularly. Depressed? I'm thinking about letting her out for a while after work this evening, especially since there doesn't seem to be any open sores.

Am I handling this correctly? What else can/should I be doing? Is the toe thing something I should be concerned about and soak/cut at more?

4 years ago
We just moved onto 18 acres last winter and this spring I was thrilled to discover all sorts of wild blackberry around the property. I've picked gallons upon gallons of them (currently in the freezer so I can process everything at once). I'm going to finish up picking the next couple of days, because they're pretty much done now, just waiting for the last red berries to finish ripening. And I still can't get to probably 1/3 of the canes!

These are pretty much completely wild brambles, and I've paid the price picking them this summer -- my hands and arms look like I fell into a box of kittens playing with razor blades, and my bottom half has been chiggered like mad. I don't want to mow/brush hog over everything to start over entirely next year, but I really want to get these brambles under some semblance of control.

After some research online, my tentative plan is to work through the bramble patches this summer and pull out the dead canes, and try to prune what's green, and train what's left to trellises. Maybe transplant some plants into a more accessible area on the property and arrange them in more easily harvestable rows. But I'm worried that pruning AND transplanting would be too much of a shock in one season.

Thoughts from more experienced people?
4 years ago