As God as my witness, I thought turkeys could fly…

The scene was bucolic, pastoral, and very much small farm.

The turkeys in their barn pen, enjoying daylight and free access to pasture

I have written about building poultry pens in the 1940′s barn, converting what was left of stalls into poultry wire enclosed pens for the meat chickens, the turkeys, and a separate brooding room.  The brooding room is now home to 6 ducks and two geese.  The turkeys moved into their pen a week or so ago.

But yesterday, I mowed the pasture and set up the electric poultry netting fence as a perimeter for the birds to be safe (safer) from predators.  AT night, they can be secured in the barn pens.

Turkeys are interesting birds.  It’s not un common to read reports on the internet of them flying out of their fenced pens and into nearby trees to roost for the night, or to fly over a fence, only to then sqawk to be let back inside the confines with their turkey kin.  So as I opened the door to let them explore, I was prepared for nearly anything.

Pheasants, even at 4 weeks old, fly when released from their brooder box into the fly pen.  Some walk, some stay inside, but many take to the air.  The turkeys were slow to explore, preferring the known safety of their barn, but as they began to step out side, one of them took flight, down the length of the pen, over the fence and into the thick brush east of the barn.

Slowly, I backed out of the barn, walked around the barn and electrified fence, and began moving through the shoulder high weeds and brush in search of the eloped thanksgiving dinner.  To be honest, I had visions of each turkey “flying the coop” and taking both my  initial investment and future earnings with them as they took off for refuge in the habitat.

Electric poultry netting protects the birds from ground predators

What I found, when I found it, was a turkey who looked just as amazed that it could fly as I was.  I easily collected it out of the brush and returned it to the others in the pen.

All of which brought to mind the old television sitcom WKRP in Cincinnati.  If you don’t know the show, it featured Gordon Jump (later he became the Maytag Repairman in commercials) as a suit wearing radio station manager and a collection of misfits who worked at the radio station.  In one episode, they hatched a Thanksgiving promotion that included dropping live turkeys from a helicopter at a shopping center.  The radio news man, Les Nessman, reported on the ensuing carnage  of live turkeys crashing to the ground to their death and smashing car windshields and equated it to the Hindenburg disaster.

During the closing credits, the disheveled station manager Jump enters the office with all gathered around and utters probably the funniest poultry line in the history of television.

Building a turkey pen in the barn

I’ve been working since early spring on the barn.  The barn, built in the late ’30s or early ’40s has not been used for livestock for at least 20 years, maybe longer.  And before that, I don’t think it was mucked out, so the stalls and floors are covering a dry compost soil.  Over time, the original pens have lost their design function.

The east face of the original barn, built by Art Andrew, with modifications over the decades.

On the east side, there are three person-height doors, and on the west, there are two.  The center door connects to a walkway that bisects the barn.  At some point in time, the sliding barn door on the lean to on the east wall was cut out to make an opening for the Farmall 706 tractor.  I’ve put up a temporary wall to block the weather.

In the photo, the left door leads to the new turkey pen.

You can tell from the photo this is a very weathered barn with a significant list.  Nothing in the barn is square.  So designing new supports for walls, a door, and the framing for the chicken wire was done with some measuring and a lot of estimating.  This is crude construction at it’s best…or worst.

A quick frame from scrap 2"x 6" lumber closes a passage in the barn to complete the pen.

I made a frame for an old screen door,  This gives access to the turkeys from the inside of the barn for feed and water.  The screen was out of the door, and I stapled 1 inch poultry netting to the face of the frame.

I cut the poultry netting long at the top and the bottom to leave a sweep to help deter small animals from burrowing or gnawing on the door frame.

The 1 inch poultry netting ( chicken wire) is 48 inch wide.  I strung a 2 ” x 6″ horizontal between the existing posts in the barn, then stapled the poultry netting to the ceiling and mid  frame 2 “x 6″.

Finally, I burred some poultry wire in the ground around the perimeter to help deter any digging predators and rabbits.

The installed door.

The turkeys in their new home.

Summer Rains

We woke this morning to the aftermath of last nights rains.

The 2010 Brood of 52 Pheasants

This is the fifth batch of pheasants raised here at Two Mile and they arrived today by US Postal service at the post office.  I stopped by yesterday and told the postmaster they were coming, and this morning, I got there before the delivery arrived.

Some people don’t know that most baby chicks of all species are shipped by US Mail.  A certain number, based on the size of the bird, are put in a box so that their internal body heat keeps them all warm, and usually, they can survive for a day or two before they need food and water.

NPR’s Scott Simon did a story last weekend on chicks by mail.

June 1st Storm

A tornado struck north of Mt. Ayr, Iowa yesterday around 5:17 PM, early news reports suggest the damage at one farm is in the millions of dollars.  Mt. Ayr is about 30 minutes from here.

What’s interesting is I had just started mowing around 5:00 or a little after, when I noticed the ducks had returned to their pen, which is earlier than normal.  I’ve written about the geese who share the two ponds, but in the time I’ve lived here, I have not see a flock ever pause or rest on the ponds.  But about the time of the tornado, a flock of a dozen more geese changed direction over the farm and set down in the big pond.

As I mowed back and forth, Zinger, who usually watches the mowing from under the deck, was following me back and forth as I made progress through the yard.  The sky overhead was cloudy, and the thunder and lightning were all NW of Two Mile.

Finally, seeing Zinger so distressed, I stopped, went inside, and opened my Weather Scope software to look at the radar.

Below is the image I snapped around 5:33 PM.  The tornado warning area stopped about a mile up Seven Mile Road, so Two Mile wasn’t included in the warning, but the animals were clearly feeling the disturbance.  In the photo, the circle is the software marking the center of the thunderstorm, not the tornado location.

(Click to see large) Still image from Weather Scope software of thunderstorm location after a tornado caused damage north of Mr. Ayr, Iowa.

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