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#1
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Tree for chook shade?
Hi All
We are looking for surgestions for a tree to plant next to our chook pen which will cope with the nutriment load give shade in summer and feed us and the chooks ! dose any one have any experience with such a wonder ? We are thinking maybe a nut tree or stone fruit. Cold and frosty in winter sticking hot in summer. TIA |
#2
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can you grow mullberries where you are? they make great chook house
shade trees and deciduous in winter, then you get all that fruit from a well fed tree. added bonus all the fruit you can't eat when it falls the the ground the chooks get a good feed. len snipped -- happy gardening 'it works for me it could work for you,' "in the end ya' gotta do what ya' gotta do" but consider others and the environment http://members.optusnet.com.au/~gardenlen1/ my e/mail addies have spam filters you should know what to delete before you send. |
#3
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Do they lay RED eggs Len????
"len gardener" wrote in message ... can you grow mullberries where you are? they make great chook house shade trees and deciduous in winter, then you get all that fruit from a well fed tree. added bonus all the fruit you can't eat when it falls the the ground the chooks get a good feed. len snipped -- happy gardening 'it works for me it could work for you,' "in the end ya' gotta do what ya' gotta do" but consider others and the environment http://members.optusnet.com.au/~gardenlen1/ my e/mail addies have spam filters you should know what to delete before you send. |
#4
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lol good one sg1 lol,
nah but boy do the mullberries get big and juicy from all the nutrients. lol len snipped -- happy gardening 'it works for me it could work for you,' "in the end ya' gotta do what ya' gotta do" but consider others and the environment http://members.optusnet.com.au/~gardenlen1/ my e/mail addies have spam filters you should know what to delete before you send. |
#5
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"nome" wrote in message news Hi All We are looking for surgestions for a tree to plant next to our chook pen which will cope with the nutriment load give shade in summer and feed us and the chooks ! dose any one have any experience with such a wonder ? We are thinking maybe a nut tree or stone fruit. Cold and frosty in winter sticking hot in summer. TIA we have a couple of passionfuit vines growing over our chook shed. we are in the outer north west of sydney, if thats of any assistance |
#6
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"nome" wrote in message news Hi All We are looking for surgestions for a tree to plant next to our chook pen which will cope with the nutriment load give shade in summer and feed us and the chooks ! dose any one have any experience with such a wonder ? We are thinking maybe a nut tree or stone fruit. Cold and frosty in winter sticking hot in summer. TIA Olive trees in our chook shed |
#7
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nome writes:
We are looking for surgestions for a tree to plant next to our chook pen which will cope with the nutriment load give shade in summer and feed us and the chooks ! dose any one have any experience with such a wonder ? We are thinking maybe a nut tree or stone fruit. Cold and frosty in winter sticking hot in summer. When I was a kid we had a chookyard with a fig tree in it. The chooks loved the summer shade, and had dust baths around it. The tree got a bit of water each time we'd empty and wash out the drinking bowls near it. The climate had frosts in winter, and now and then our summer temps would hit the century. At the time I really didn't appreciate how lucky we were to have our own fruiting fig. I remember every year searching high and low for a fig that didn't have a hole in the end! Little did I realise that the hole is a part of the package, allowing a tiny wasp access to pollinate the flowers which are inside what we (wrongly) refer to as the fruit. The figs were up out of reach of the chooks, but other winged invaders were not so easily stymied. Even though we lived in a fruit fly area, I cannot recall our figs ever having fly. Perhaps someone else can comment on this? Most stone fruits will need to be sprayed if you want edible fruit. A lemon tree would be a good choice, I'd reckon, if you could use the lemons. Whatever you plant, I think you might need to protect it with a layer of wire netting pinned flat on top of the soil to stop the chooks digging under it, or the tree will have a stunted root system and struggle to survive. -- John Savage (news address invalid; keep news replies in newsgroup) |
#8
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g'day john,
nup never had fruit fly in figs but boy ya' gotta be quick 2 beat the birds. and mate what about all those f/f remedies you know especially the diesel one hey come on now give 'em a decent go hey lol. len snipped -- happy gardening 'it works for me it could work for you,' "in the end ya' gotta do what ya' gotta do" but consider others and the environment http://members.optusnet.com.au/~gardenlen1/ my e/mail addies have spam filters you should know what to delete before you send. |
#9
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"John Savage" wrote in message om... nome writes: We are looking for surgestions for a tree to plant next to our chook pen which will cope with the nutriment load give shade in summer and feed us and the chooks ! dose any one have any experience with such a wonder ? We are thinking maybe a nut tree or stone fruit. Cold and frosty in winter sticking hot in summer. When I was a kid we had a chookyard with a fig tree in it. The chooks loved the summer shade, and had dust baths around it. The tree got a bit of water each time we'd empty and wash out the drinking bowls near it. The climate had frosts in winter, and now and then our summer temps would hit the century. At the time I really didn't appreciate how lucky we were to have our own fruiting fig. I remember every year searching high and low for a fig that didn't have a hole in the end! Little did I realise that the hole is a part of the package, allowing a tiny wasp access to pollinate the flowers which are inside what we (wrongly) refer to as the fruit. The figs were up out of reach of the chooks, but other winged invaders were not so easily stymied. Even though we lived in a fruit fly area, I cannot recall our figs ever having fly. Perhaps someone else can comment on this? Most stone fruits will need to be sprayed if you want edible fruit. A lemon tree would be a good choice, I'd reckon, if you could use the lemons. Whatever you plant, I think you might need to protect it with a layer of wire netting pinned flat on top of the soil to stop the chooks digging under it, or the tree will have a stunted root system and struggle to survive. -- John Savage (news address invalid; keep news replies in newsgroup) From what I have read about fruit fly, you would have to get an infestation from elsewhere to have a problem as fruit fly larva hatch from the ground and have to spend approx 24 hours waiting for wings to dry before flying. Chooks usually reckon this is a good arrangement and need less other feed that day. Therefore enough chooks under fruit trees = no fruit fly. Of course fruit fly may emerge from elsewhere and infect your fruit (neighbours), but they will not be able to complete their cycle accompanied by chooks. Regards Phil J. --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.802 / Virus Database: 545 - Release Date: 26/11/04 |
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