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Design & StylesHave a Mini-Farm in Your Own Backyard
Do you yearn for a few acres and a self sufficient lifestyle?
Well, while you are waiting it out in suburbia, you can still
create a productive mini-farm in your own backyard, just by
utilizing the space to its best advantage.
Honey, Eggs & Milk
A beehive will be productive addition to your garden, especially
if you need bees to cross pollinate your fruit trees. A simple
backyard beehive is simple to install and doesn’t take up much
space. You can order one over the Internet. The Top Bar Hive is
designed to keep your bees happy and stress free without a lot of
labor and no chemicals. You can purchase a swarm from a bee supply
company, and you’re in business.
Keeping chickens may seem daunting, but when you are harvesting
your own fresh eggs you will never regret it. Plan your backyard
hen coop for an area sheltered from wind and sun, and make sure the
coop adequately protects your birds from cold and rain. Your coop
needs dry nesting boxes and an impervious floor – meaning that it
won’t soak up moisture, so concrete is better than timber or earth.
These coops will have netted ``scratch’’ areas so your chickens can
enjoy an earth floor as well.
You can buy ready made hen coops online, in a variety of designs
suited to your needs. A movable hen coop on wheels might work
better for your backyard, especially if you would like to let your
chickens out to scratch around the backyard.
You can also find plans online to help you build your own
customized hen coop. Once you have the hens’ home in place, buy
first year pullets so you can start harvesting eggs as soon as they
have settled in. If you want chicks, you will have to check with
your local authority about keeping a rooster. Many councils and
neighbors don’t mind chickens, but they draw the line at being
woken up at dawn by a rooster!
The best breeds for backyard egg production are Dorking,
Buckeye, Orpington, Barnevelder, Plymouth Rock and Sussex. These
breeds are quiet and docile and make good pets where there are
children to consider. Don’t choose a bird that is known to be
aggressive or noisy.
Your mini-farm can also produce milk, cream, cheese and yoghurt,
as long as local regulations allow. A small goat like the
Australian Miniature Goat and other dwarf breeds will not take up
much room and will prove an excellent pet although they do not
produce as much milk as larger breeds. Of the larger goats, the
Saanen and Nubian are pleasant to have around. Goats are generally
placid, and easy to look after, as long as they are sensitively
handled as kids. Make sure you know the temperament of your goat
and never tether it near the washing line! (Yes, they do eat
everything).
Operating a mini-farm in your backyard can be an adventure for
all the family, and won’t outrage your neighbors if you keep the
nuisance factor to a minimum, and share some of your bounty. While
you won’t have the bountiful harvests of your dream small holding,
you will often have so much produce that you won’t know what else
to do with it!
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