See the cold weather spread, 1 hour frames
I wish I had seen this earlier in the day. This page is dynamic. By the time most of you will see this, it will have already been cold in most of the US for more than 24 hours.
Anyway, here is the comparison for 8:00 EST (0100Z) for today vs yesterday.
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We are still deep in the winter woods.
We were right in the wheelhouse. Word of the Day: Thundersleet!We were on the very northern edge of the ice storm last night, with just light sleet and lighter snow locally. Roads were passable this morning, but cars overnighted outside were pretty well encrusted.
Yikes, stay safe and hope y'all don't lose powerWe were right in the wheelhouse. Word of the Day: Thundersleet!
At this point what's still coming down is pretty much snow at this point. Very fine stuff, and not a lot of it, but continuous all morning long (once we got past the sleet and freezing rain). The picture below is just as it changed over to snow. Most of the accumulation is ice/sleet.
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A low of -1F and a high about ~12F today.
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Stay safe. Indoors is best.
The only times I've been out this week is to walk the dogs.Stay safe. Indoors is best.
Haha. Monday I saw my neighbor chasing around the chickens in his yard to get them indoors for this cold snap.2 and sunny this morning. My heated chicken waterer crapped out last week and the replacement arrived yesterday. Happy to report it's doing the job. I may have to run home and check for eggs this afternoon so they don't freeze. The coop itself is insulated but still will get into the teens when its around zero out.
I'm on a tiny lot. Chickens can be 5 ft from the property line if the neighbor signs off, which they did. We had one odor issue when a lot of rain was getting into their run and some spilled food started to smell bad, but no issues otherwise. I treat the coop like a big hamster cage and clear out the wood shavings and manure every or every other week and it goes into our compost system along with yard waste and kitchen scraps. No smell there either. No roosters allowed, but even hens, especially certain species, can get noisy. Ours aren't too bad. We have cold-hardy breeds- Amerucanas (green eggs!), Buff Orpingtons, and Barred Rocks. I'd probably not get Barred Rocks again as they are a little less mellow than the others. Anyway I used a very low wattage lamp in the coop on cold nights their first winter but haven't bothered since.Haha. Monday I saw my neighbor chasing around the chickens in his yard to get them indoors for this cold snap.
Fort Worth is a weird place; there's a fair amount of urban farming. On what used to be one of my common cycling routes (before I moved), I would pass a guy who grew crops on his front yard. Corn, tomatoes, etc. He changed it up year to year.
There are a TON of chickens in the inner city; it's not uncommon to hear crowing in a lot of neighborhoods (including mine). City code says the chickens must be kept 50 feet from any human-inhabited structures which is virtually impossible on these small city lots (I have a bigger lot compared to most, but only in the far rear corner would they be far enough from my house but they'd be too close to neighboring homes). As it is, most people ignore code and just keep their chickens wherever, often right next to their houses.
My neighbor with the chickens lives next to a cop and his chicken yard is adjacent to his house and pretty close to the cop's house. Apparently the cop doesn't care. Fort Worth is funny that way; they let a lot of that stuff alone as long as they don't hear about any problems.
Okay, now THAT is cold!What I'll be waking up to to travel to a wrestling meet Saturday morning...
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Yeah, I may have to put a sweater on this weekend.Okay, now THAT is cold!
We had chix in our exurban world but could not keep them alive with so many predators. Luckily I have diehard neighbors that have chix and ducks and goats and horses and...I'm on a tiny lot. Chickens can be 5 ft from the property line if the neighbor signs off, which they did. We had one odor issue when a lot of rain was getting into their run and some spilled food started to smell bad, but no issues otherwise. I treat the coop like a big hamster cage and clear out the wood shavings and manure every or every other week and it goes into our compost system along with yard waste and kitchen scraps. No smell there either. No roosters allowed, but even hens, especially certain species, can get noisy. Ours aren't too bad. We have cold-hardy breeds- Amerucanas (green eggs!), Buff Orpingtons, and Barred Rocks. I'd probably not get Barred Rocks again as they are a little less mellow than the others. Anyway I used a very low wattage lamp in the coop on cold nights their first winter but haven't bothered since.
We have peach trees and blueberry bushes in our front yard, as well as lots of pollinator stuff. All covered with snow for now...
Oh, the funnier cold weather chicken thing is chasing them down to put a bit of vaseline on their combs to prevent frostbite!
I basically built "chicken Dannemora" since we have possums and raccoons in our neighborhood. 1/4" hardware cloth for everything and it goes 1' deep and 1'out and is buried under stone at ground level.We had chix in our exurban world but could not keep them alive with so many predators. Luckily I have diehard neighbors that have chix and ducks and goats and horses and...
Rat snakes?Don't get me started on the black snake invaders.
Friends in SC had a rat snake that would visit their coop every other day, taking one egg each time. They named it Amy and let Amy do her thing. A neighbor (who moved to Holly Hill from Up North) got all excited (and posted on Facebook) about "being a southern woman doing what she had to do" and killed Amy with a shovel.Fort Chix. My fort had a chix wire dome over a dog wire fence that was circled by a hog wire second perimeter that enclosed a chicken run. It worked except for occasional breaches that became so regular I threw my hands up. Don't get me started on the black snake invaders. Once I caught a copulating couple of them inside the henhouse. Together they weighed fifteen or twenty pounds, and once I caught a snake with and egg half swallowed. I made him spit it out and washed it good as new. Of course I never have killed a snake and stop when driving to nudge them off the road.