Monthly Archives: September 2010

my composting toilet

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So…guess who bought her very own composting toilet this weekend?!  Yep, putting a new toilet and black water tank inside the trailer was getting complicated and so when Chris suggested a composting toilet outside in a little hut next to my trailer, it just made sense. This way I have more storage space inside the trailer (I’m going to put in shelves where the sink used to be that I had ripped out to make room for a toilet) and I’ll have a toilet that doesn’t put any pressure on the resources and utilities on the farm. Waterless, non-electric and septic tank free… I’m pretty excited about it. Will definitely let you know how it works out.


For those interested, I got a Sun Mar Excel Non-Electric and I bought it from Battery Direct in Burnaby.  If anyone is thinking of getting a Sun Mar composting toilet, Battery Direct has a ton in stock that you can pick up immediately (as opposed to Home Depot where you have to wait 5 weeks for delivery).

Funnnn!  My parent’s helped me get started on my deck and outhouse this weekend. It’s not complete yet, so stay tuned for final pictures and a personal review…

chickens!

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So, our big welcome home present for Chris and Julie was a fixed up chicken coop and ten chickens – our first farm animals!

Last saturday, Matt, Chantelle, baby Canaan and I went to the Langley Farm Auction to check out the chickens and other animals they auction off there.  It wasn’t our plan to leave with chickens, but we got caught up in the excitement of it pretty quick and got right into picking out some favorites from the dozens of crates of chickens they had there.

Matt got serious with his auction paddle and we ended up bringing 12 chickens home (9 hens and 3 roosters) that day.  We didn’t want 3 roosters but they came with the hens, so we found another owner for them the next day, keeping just 1 rooster for ourselves and our hens.

Once home, we put them into the outdoor part of their run while we fixed up the coop, scooping out old poop, tearing down old boards, putting in insulation and new walls, perches, fresh hay in the nesting area and patching the roof. Since then we’ve begun weeding around the exterior and planting some flowers alongside the coop and the run.

We’ve still got some work to do, but we’re pretty excited about our chickens. We’ve got 2 silkies, a banrock(?), a common red hen and 6 Russian Orloffs (including the rooster). We had no idea what the Orloff’s were till we brought them home and it turns out they have a pretty fascinating history AND are listed on the critically endangered species list!  We’re pretty stoked we get to do our part to keep the line alive and give them a good healthy life.

Yay for chickens!!! 

PS – we aren’t planning on eating our beloved chickens, but we will be eating some of their eggs and possibly trying our hand at breeding some of our Russians :)