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The Hearth & Heart of a Country Home & Homestead is the Kitchen Wood Stove

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Wood Stove and Chimney Installed

The Hearth & Heart of a Country Home & Homestead is the Kitchen Wood Stove! It is that by which a family can cook and prepare meals for sustenance. That which can provide heat and warmth for the household and all who enter there. That which when the Sky’s grow dark, the winds blow and the snow falls and the power flickers or fails can mean survival, the difference between failure and success! 

That is why today is such a very special day here at Briden Farm, We now have our Wood Stove and Chimney installed! This lifts such a huge weight off our shoulders and is a major step toward our overall Self Sufficiency!  

The difference is Survival! Not to mention a good cup of Tea at Briden Farm, “where the tea is always on and the coffee is not far behind”. 

Our First Egg at Briden Farm

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Our First Egg comes from a Brahma Chickens

Our First Egg at Briden Farm Follows the arrival of our Buff Brahmas! We had a bit of a scramble this past weekend as we had the opportunity to expand our flock! You can read more about that here…

New Dual Purpose Chickens Come to Briden Farm

After getting our New Chickens, which were told are about 4-5 months old and soon ready to start laying, we become very Eggs-Pectant! 

Watching the new birds, and some of our existing ones, to see if they’re starting to lay! So, when happens, when the day comes when the first egg arrives, it’s an Egg-Sighting Day! 

Some of You know Eggsactly what we mean! Right? 😉  

PS: Yes, we know that’s an Easter Egger Rooster, pictured with the Brahma Hen! 

New Dual Purpose Chickens Come to Briden Farm

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New Dual Purpose Chickens

We had a bit of a scramble this past weekend as we had the opportunity to expand our flock! 

Up till now we’ve had a big Easter Egger Rooster, who we call Buddy! Mother Hen, a Buff Orpington who we call Henny Penny and her two chicks Chicky & Picky who were born Sept 28 & 30, 2020. Plus, Jack and His Gang who’s Father was a White Orpington and their mothers were Brown Layers. Jack and his Gang members were incubator hatched about Sept 11th. In addition to these we had 4 Young Buff Orpington who were hatched from a hen, a sister to Henny Penny. These 4 comprised 2 Pullets and 2 Cockerels. So, for those of you who count, we had a total of 19 Birds. 

That is till this weekend! When we saw an add listing 6 Sasso Chickens! The picture they included looked like Brown Layers or Buff Orpington and they were well priced. So, we called and were told there were 8, 6 Pullets and 2 cockerels. Then when we got there they were 12. 

The price was right, so we went and got them! We waited till after dark, went and got them from their Roosts, boxed them, and brought them to our new Chicken Coop. 

This of course meant some of our Cockerels went to Freezer Camp and the Table Fair! It’s always with sadness and reverence and respect that we do this but it is a necessary part of farming. After all, if too many Roosters are allowed to exist, they fight! Sometimes to the death! So, it becomes necessary! 

Thus the Cockerels and Roosters get replaced with Pullets and Hens. In fact, with rising feed costs and pretty much stagnant egg prices, it becomes necessary to develop more dual purpose birds. Which then means good meat, from the Cockerels and Roosters, and eggs from the Hens. 

So, bringing in Pullets and Hens, especially Dual Purpose Birds, makes sense! So, we’re quite happy that in these new birds are some of the earliest, heritage breeds, like the Buff Brahmas and Wyandottes.