Chicken Coop Plans

April 15, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Urban Homestead

Get started building your chicken coop NOW!

Build Your Own Chicken Coop

The plans are simple, straightforward, and almost guarantee your success. You will be proud of your chiclken coop and your you chickens will be healthy and happy.

Large Chicken Coop

The e-book contains all of the following information:

  • Plans and instruction to build a medium sized coop for a small fraction of the cost of buying one.
  • Directions and plans to build a premium, taj mahal chicken coop that is easy to clean and automatically collects you eggs.
  • Step by step instructions to build your own chicken tractor portable chicken coop that is easy to clean and move to provide nutritious fertilizer for your garden.

All of the plans are full color and drawn to scale.

organic chickens

Medium Sized Coop

But wait, the book doesn’t just include plans, it tells you how to plan for your chickens and pick the right breed.

What are the 6 things you must have before you even think about building a coop?
How can you easily extend your coop into a free-range style enclosure?
Which breed of chicken for your climate, space, and egg production goals?

Portable Chicken Tractor

The book walks you through how to set-up your building site and select your materials that will make building quick, easy, and inexpensive. You will learn how to easily breed chickens yourself and develop your own growing flock.

Do you know the 9 daily, monthly and yearly chores you must perform to keep your chickens healthy, happy and laying eggs? You will when you are done with Building a Chicken Coop!

You’ll also learn how to protect your coop from predators such as foxes, coyotes, cats, hawks and other common varmints.

You’ll learn the 8 foods not to feed your chickens how to care for commons chicken ailment…and much much more.

Don’t wait, order yours today.

CLICK HERE NOW TO ORDER YOUR COPY!

If you order now you get free gifts including

  • How to Find Inexpensive Materials for Building!
  • How to Control the Environment of Your Chickens for Maximum Health and Production!
  • Step by Step Instruction for Builing Free NEst Boxes..and
  • Where to Position Your Coop For Best Health and Production!

All you have to do to get started is CLICK HERE

All the books are available for immediate download. No more worrying about losing pages, getting them dirty, or your dog eating them. Just print more!

If you want to keep chicken in your back yard you must read this book. Whether you have a small yard made of cement or oodles of space to play with Building a Chicken Coop is invaluable in building the right chicken coop. Bill Keene focuses on your being absolutely prepared before the first chicken scratches in your yard! If you follow the directions in the book, you will have the right equipment, to care for the right species, living in the right coop, located in the perfect spot. It’s broken down into easy, actionable steps to ensure your maximum success! The full color, scale plans for the chicken coops are well thought out and easy to follow. He includes materials lists and required tools as well. Bill Keene is also a good steward of the planet including advice on how to reuse and recycle materials to keep the cost of your perfect chicken coop down. Not only does he tell you how to build a home for your flock, Bill informs and educates about proper chicken care so that you will be a responsible caretaker for you flock. Don’t wait, download your copy now and get started on your chicken coop. Healthy, tasty eggs are but a click a away. John – Amateur Chicken Farmer – Tennessee, USA

There is even of 60 Day Money Back Guarantee…What are you waiting for…CLICK NOW

Top Ten Ways to Save Money with an Organic Vegetable Garden

April 12, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Knowledge Drop, Urban Homestead

1. Do it yourself:  Don’t pay someone else to dig, plant, cut and prune for you.  In addition to saving money, the exercise will make your feel better.  If working in the yard makes you grown – get over it.

2. Set your mower deck higher: set it at its highest setting (or at lease higher than you do now.  Don’t bag..leave the clippings where they fall.  You save on fertilizer and your lawn will look better.  Clippings don’t cause thatch, fertilizer does.

3. Make your own weed killer: vinegar, salt and dish soap, evidently boiling water kills weeds, and gin dish soap and vinegar.  Hit google…or this link: Hit Me! Evidently the vinegar kills the weed, salt keeps it from growing back, and soap sticks to the weed so the first two things can work. Amounts vary from recipe to recipe (or is it a formulation…again I digress) and do not appear to be very important. As the salt sticks around for a bit, you need to wait a little before replanting. [Didn't someone sale fields in the bible or something?]

4. Get your tools at yard sales and use hand tools. Never pay retail. Good tools last forever. Power tools use gas, stink, pollute your yard and the world at large, and leave you smelling like gasoline after you are done. Oh yeah, they are expensive too.

5. Compost. Make your own dirt. Don’t buy a bin, you don’t need one. Dig a hole. Make a pile. If you just pile up everything that was once once alive [and not an animal] that is left over from your kitchen, you will have compost in six to nine months. If you follow the rules and mix your compose and turn it, you can have some super dirt in two to three months.

6. Make your own mulch. Shred your leaves with you lawn mower. Contact a tree service and ask for chipped branches. You may get them for free since you will save the company the dumping fee. Be prepared though, it doesn’t look as nice as bought mulch but it works great on your garden and saves money. You may also consider stones or pebbles, the initial outlay is higher but they don’t have to be replaced. A truck load of local stone costs less than you think.

7. Divide plants, share seedlings, ask you neighbors. Talk to you neighbors and see if they have any plants that need dividing. Join a garden club or plant exchange. Look for sale by garden clubs and botanical gardens.

8. Watering. Get a rain barrel. You don’t need some expensive system. Contact your water department or look for recycled plastic barrels. Use soaker hoses in your beds and garden; you will use much less water. Water deeply once or twice per week. Daily, short watering make for shallow roots and unhealthy plants.

9. Grow Vegetables and Herbs. The saving will take to be realized but you can save a lot of money growing your own food. The savings will only increase over time. Especially if you follow the above tips. See my previous post for a calculator on gardening savings.

10. Cancel your cable and get outside in your yard.

Opening Day….

February 24, 2009 by John  
Filed under Urban Homestead

I like to garden.  I keep trying to do so successfully.  The ADD makes it a bit difficult.  I am told that I make a better hunter than a farmer….but the wife won’t let me get guns…..so that leaves a bit of gardening.  As I live in town [Nashvegas, Music City, USA] I have limited space.  I read lots of books and dream of my own farm one day….but gotta live near the hospital while the wife trains to be a surgeon….taken out body parts….pretty cool IMHO.

So…I have previously put in raised beds at our house in Augusta, Georgia.  We grew lots of vegetables and flowers.  I put in the automatic sprinkler system.  We had chickens….speaking – writing – whatever…I love chickens.  They are a bit dumb but infinitely amusing.  I intend to get a couple…three….four…they are quieter than my dog..stay away from roosters if you have neighbors.  That whole crow at dawn thing is bupkis…they crow all the time.  Pullets [baby girl chickens - that's what you want - avoid the straight run and the cockerals...little noisy *!$@#!]  The girl chickens are definitely quieter than my dog and the eggs taste good.  No you don’t need a rooster to get eggs….think about human females…but I digress.

So I read lots about farming and gardening.  I want to be more self sufficient and green but I am not.  I keep trying.  I’m not some kind of obsessive compulsive..judgmental…organic fashista.  I do prefer organic food and believe that we are better off without lots of petroleum products and amonia involved in the gorwing process….but I don’t really have time for the condemnation of the other people.  Most people are not actively evil…just rather misguided.  Uh…dang off topic again.

So raised beds produce more food.  Organic growing produces healthier food.  So I built me some raised beds in the back yard.

Step 1, find a place to grow some food.

Step 2, plan your garden.  I swear i’m gonna plan this time.  I promise.