It’s been over a year since my daughter started playing Hockey. When she started she could Hardly skate or handle the puck very well. Heck, she could hardly hold the stick correctly – and she fell down a lot! That’s one of the things I have noticed the most about her current performance. She almost never falls now, she can go a whole game without falling.
Tonight she started her 4th season of In House Hockey and it’s kind of a big deal. We almost did not do it because the games are on Sunday during church, but they moved the time (not sure if my complaining helped or not) to early enough to catch church after. Now it sounds like they will be moving the game days to Saturday’s which is even better.
I am so impressed with her tenacity. I mentioned before she just decided to start hockey out of the blue. It was rough, expensive to start (and is still horribly expensive for each 10 week season), and I had a lot of doubts about it all. But she has done really well. I’d like for her to make more connections here, but that’s been an issue since we moved here. This is a difficult place to break into as most of these families have know each other for generations, or they just have no interest in being open to knew folks, but hey … we will wear them down – I mean we will win them over with kindness and always being around. 🙂
The coyotes are a problem now. For years they have been content to pace our fence and drool over the animals. I built an 8 foot fence around a few acres with my buddy Rick and his son Phear several years ago. This keeps them at bay. But it does not protect against the animals that are dumb enough to leave the safety of our yard. Yeah, I am looking at you chickens. They have mixed it up with a few of the dogs as well and have made snacks of our outside cats.
The problem is that by the time I get out there with my gun, they are gone. They hear me, smell me, whatever, they split or hide. What I needed was a solution that let me take them out from far away. I decided to purchase a rifle. I had no idea what to get, so I went to the Range in Fresno and asked a lot of questions. I decided on the Ruger 9MM Carbine PC. Powerful enough to put them down quickly and in the most humane manner, but agile enough for someone like me that is still learning to shoot a rifle.
So very, very different from a handgun, which I am pretty decent with now.
Before I attempt to shoot one, I’ll need to spend some time dialing in the sights (red dot) and getting good with handling the rifle. I don’t want to cause suffering for the coyotes, I just want to stop them from killing our animals. Do do that, I need to be proficient so I can get a kill with one shot. There are 2-3 times as many as usual, and they are coming up to our property during the day now. We have vineyards all around us and they hide and wait for a chicken to jump the fence and scratch for bugs in the fields.
About 8 months ago Camee started her transformation into a monster. Well a Jr. Monster. She is not quite there yet, but has come a very long way. When she started she did not have any experience on the ice at all, and certainly no hockey experience. (She does have one San Jose Sharks game under her belt!) She just got it in her head that she wanted to play hockey, and through sheer will and determination, she has made a way for herself.
She started with Try Hockey For Free and then moved to Learn to Play. She has just now started on the In House team! Try Hockey for Free was just that, a great way to get started to see if it was a good fit. Basically just borrow all the needed gear and get out on the ice. The rest is up to you. The next step was Learn to Play. It’s basically the same as Try Hockey, but with the payment you get a few additional things. You get a jersey that allows you free admission to skate times during the week, which is a huge savings, and it allows you to track your progress and start to build on your skills. Camee will continue in this class for the foreseeable future in addition to the In House team.
The In House Team really steps things up. There is a practice each week for an hour, and then a game each week as well. Just like with coaching the boys soccer team, I am able to help out, not coach of course, I don’t know what I am doing and I can’t skate, but I can volunteer. Just took a course for safety and got a background check. Easy peasy. It was $500 for the 10 weeks of in house, which I think will be totally worth it.
The next step is Travel Team, which is being an actual Jr. Monster. Camee is driven to get better, she says she wants to go to college on a Hockey scholarship. I believe she can, I am more than happy to invest in this with time and money. The gear is not cheap and the time commitment is no small thing with my career and side business, as well as the other 8 kids, but it’s totally doable.
I am really excited for my daughter! And I am excited to get to know some more people here in Fresno.
As a “city kid” the last few years have brought a lot of new experiences as I stumble my way through life on a small family “ranch”. Over the years we have accumulated chickens, ducks, goats, horses, many dogs and cats and the occasional vagrant 4 legged creature. I have almost grown accustomed to the joys and the sorrows of bringing new animal life into the world. Almost being the key word.
Chicken: “Red Leader”
A Brief History
The chicken population on our ranch started with 20 chicks purchased through the mail. They grew and grew, which motivated us to build a second coop, and then they started to lay eggs. I really did not think or care much about the eggs aspect, we just wanted to have chickens to see what it was like. Then tragedy struck and a dog killed all but 4 of the chickens. It was awful. I know to most people, and rightly so, view chickens are utilitarian, they provide eggs and/or meat. I am not sure the incident would have been as heart wrenching to others as it was to us. We raised these chickens from chicks, named them, and established a daily routine with them. They were a part of our family. I know, I know … they are chickens, birds, and sometimes they seem almost prehistoric, like little raptors that might attempt to eat you if you lay still long enough.
A few days after the chicken tragedy of 18′, we decided to rebuild our chicken population. It took time, but we got up to about 60 chickens. Today we hatch our own by either letting chickens hatch a clutch or taking them selectively and putting them into a large incubator. We love our Ameraucanas, blue egg layers with a very friendly disposition. They will run to you and jump up to your shoulder and just hang out there. I mean, they do this with the kids, I rather not have a chicken anywhere near my face.
Hatch Time
What surprises me is that when an egg hatches, I am still in awe. I can’t help but praise God for his brilliant design. Most of the time the hatching starts with peeping. The chick inside the egg starts to peep and we know it’s close to time. My wife and I will pick the egg up and whistle at it, and almost always the little life inside echos back our whistle with a peep. There then seems to be three approaches that chicks take to escape their calcium fortified birth pod.
1. Punch a hole in the egg and breath for a bit
A small hole forms in the egg shell and a beak sticks out and begins to open and close repeatedly. The peeping increases as does the breathing. Then either an hour or so goes by and the chick emerges, or 10-15 hours later the chick emerges.
2. All at once!
This approach is to be silent, no cracking of the egg, no signs of anything. Then within 5 minutes there is a chick. These chicks almost always tend to be larger and within a few minutes are walking fine and dry out pretty quick. I hypothesize that they are late bloomers and rather not mess around with the drama of hatching for 10-15 hours and just burst into the world ready to go. I imagine they won’t be moving out any time soon either …
3. Still silence
That last approach is really not an approach. Every now and then an egg will start to hatch and then stop permanently or it will never even start. We don’t have enough experience yet to know why this is, other than sometimes life simply does not happen due to complications we are unaware of. Only once has a chick hatched and not made it, and this is 1 in about 100. Currently we have 1-2 chicks being born every day.
After hatching
What happens after a chick hatches is quite entertaining. They are slimy, confused and floppy. As in they flop around a lot. Within about 30 minutes they are starting to dry off and look a little more like a bird and less like an alien. We have a “starter box” under a heat lamp which helps them dry out. Within about 80 minutes they are pretty dry and fluffly, they look like chicks now and they can walk around a bit. They look totally drunk doing so, but they can technically walk around the box and move to where they are comfortable with the heat. They absolutely need the heat but they will move in and out of range of the heat lamp as needed. Within 3-4 hours, you would never guess that the bird was just a few hours old. They peep, they drink water, they peck at food and are ready to socialize with similar sized chicks. They are however, not super friendly unless you handle them the first few hours of their lives, but even then I think that instinct is very strong in birds and they just don’t prefer to be near you.
Ducklings
The process is much the same with our ducklings, but they 100% want nothing to do with us no matter what. They are pretty much jerks, but they are cute and their eggs are my absolute favorite. With ducklings you just need to be vigilant about water. Because they want to swim in anything that has any water in it. They splash it out and/or get it dirty and then they have nothing to drink. You also can’t have chickens and ducks together as chicks and ducklings. Ducks are super dirty and they will make the chicks sick. As adults they get along fine. While we have 4 coops for the chickens, the ducks prefer to wander on our property and often sleep in the grass out in the open or near their pool.
Eggs
I mentioned earlier that eggs were not our intention to being with, but now they very much are. We get on average about 2-3 dozen chicken eggs per day and about 8 duck eggs. As our birds mature that number will go up quite a bit. We have learned some great tricks and tips for getting our layers to produce quality eggs. I’ll save that for another post.
So there you have it. The simple joys of hatching and owning chickens and ducks. It’s a lot of work, but it really is a fun thing to do, especially with kids. There is a huge amount of stress release as well, not sure I can really explain why, it just is that way for me personally. Our kids range from 6 to 18, and they all participate in some degree or another and enjoy it. Also, if you want some fresh eggs … let me know.