PotterVilla Adventures
  • Home
  • Categories
    • Annoucements
    • Christmas
    • Fall
    • Garden
    • Jonathan
    • Matthew
    • Miscellaneous
    • Spring
    • Weather
    • Winter
  • By Matthew
  • By Jonathan

Jun 20 2008

A Completed Chicken Plucker and a few Other Thoughts

Posted by Matthew
Tweet

It’s quite chilly this morning. We open the windows last night because it’s supposed to get up close to 80 degrees today but as I sit here at the computer my fingers are so cold (and slightly numb) that I’m having a hard time typing. Yesterday I could see my breath in the morning. I’ve had to dig out the flannel shirts and sweat shirts again. (‘Course if it was winter I’d be wearing a short sleeved t-shirt–it’s only getting down in the low fifty’s or high forty’s!)

The Amazing and Famous Plucker Project
Well I finally finished it. It’s been a kinda long process, I started gathering parts in February, but I took a few breaks too (some longer than others!) –to help some friends with lambing, to wait for more parts to come and to work on other things. However The Whizbang Tub-Style Mechanical Chicken Plucker is now complete and ready to try out (I even added a couple of up-grades–one was in the plan book and one I came up with my self.) And so without further ado…(drum roll please)…here’s a picture:

DSCN9924
As y’all can see, it’s quite nice, if I do say so myself! You can also see that I added the “Mobile Whizbang” option. Here it is in action:

DSCN9918

That blue plastic tub was just the right size to cover up the motor (which must weigh about 50 lb!) This is a sideways picture of the bottom pulley’s etc. Right now I have the wrong idler pulley on there-it’s a v-grove and I need to replace it with a flat one, but it works….

DSCN9920

And now for my own innovation…..see if ya can guess what it is from this picture:

DSCN9923

Here’s another clue….

DSCN9930

What you are looking at is….A rigged up spray ring (so ya don’t have to stand there with the hose for the ten or fifteen seconds it takes to pluck a couple of birds–just flip the lever! Who has time to stand around and wait for ten whole seconds!?! ;-) )

What I did is took an old hose (hard rubbery plasticy stuff) and hooked to the 1/2″ ball valve. Then I mounted the ball valve to the plucker frame with plumber’s strap, and the hose to the plucker tub with the ever handy zip ties. Finally, I cut little one inch slits in the hose so that is sprays like this:

DSCN9933

And then when you flip the power switch as I’m doing in the above picture…

DSCN9935

I think that the thing might take a few feathers off! I can hardly wait till the broilers are ready now:

DSCN9975

There they are in the Joel Salatin style chicken tractor. It has three doors–two on the front and one big one on the back which is covered with a PVC roofing material. The pen is fairly light–without the doors on I can stand in the middle and pick it right up and carry it. On the ground though, it drags a lot because of the width (digs into the ground)…so I cobbled up a dolly for it:

DSCN9981

It’s made out of an old push lawn mower and a couple of boards. Make it do or do with out! I basically just took the handle and bolted the wheels to it. (that did end up needing some reinforcing to keep the wheel straight–weld a piece of pipe between ’em) Then I took that pesky kill switch handle thingy, and used it to hold the board at the proper angle.

I’ve also been working on some butchering tables and such (with a lot of help from the gentleman from church that gives me lumbar). I think that it’s safe to say that I’m the only one in the county with furniture grade butchering tables! This one holds two (out of three) pieces of slate counter top that another friend gave me. It’s about six feet long. Made out of planned ash boards. [He doesn’t do plugging and touch sanding though… :(

DSCN9917

Here’s a few other things:

DSCN9988+(2)

That would be the Whizbang Garden cart pieces in the bushes, and the two height (sitting or standing) single stand, and the fully adjustable killing cone stand. (plus a few odds and ends!) Here’s a close up of the singe stand:

DSCN9990+(2)

And in these two you can see how the cone stand adjustment works:

DSCN9996+(2)

DSCN9992+(2)

The guy helping me does very poor work as you can see! (insert extreme sarcasm into that last sentence if ya haven’t already) He doesn’t have any tools either. For instance the back of the single stand are held together in part by two biscuits (wooden kind–ya wouldn’t want to eat ’em!) which were cut out with a nifty little biscuit cutter outer jobber thing. I’m very pleased with how the stuff turned out.

He also has an old cast iron double sink with drain board that he is going to give me. (Did I mention that he’s pretty generous?) Then I’ll just need to figure out how to rig up the foot operated water switch….

Well I’m out of time this morning. I get to go help worm sheep today :-)

Until next time,

May He who is able to keep you from falling make your way straight, and rescue you from all ungodliness.

Matthew

Tags: Butchering Tables, Chicks, Matthew, Plucker
CONTINUE READING >
2 comments
May 13 2008

Fire Rainbow!? & etc…

Posted by Jonathan
Tweet

Well, I finally have something to blog about. Looking south over our house, I believe I have seen a fire rainbow! What a gift from God!
DSCN9813

According to Wikipedia,

A circumhorizontal arc or circumhorizon arc (CHA), also known as a fire rainbow, is a halo or an optical phenomenon similar in appearance to a horizontal rainbow, but in contrast caused by the refraction of light through the ice crystals in cirrus clouds.

It occurs only when the sun is high in the sky, at least 58° above the horizon, and can only occur in the presences of cirrus clouds. It can thus not be observed at locations north of 55°N, except occasionally from mountains.[1]

The phenomenon is quite rare because the ice crystals must be aligned horizontally to refract the high sun. The arc is formed as light rays enter the horizontally-oriented flat hexagonal crystals through a vertical side face and exit through the horizontal bottom face. It is the 90° inclination that produces the well-separated rainbow-like colours and, if the crystal alignment is just right, makes the entire cirrus cloud shine like a flaming rainbow.[2][1]

A circumhorizontal arc can be confused with an infralateral arc when the sun is high in the sky; the former is however always oriented horizontally where the latter is oriented as a section of a rainbow, e.g. as an arc stretching upwards from the horizon.[2]

I checked the pictures of infralateral arcs, and this wasn’t it. Although I realize that this rainbow in the sky wasn’t nearly as bright as some of the ones documented across the internet, I doubt that I will ever see one again–a circumhorizontal arc, the rarest of all meteorological phenomena!

DSCN9804

DSCN9807

Pretty Cool, huh?

One of our music providers has gone off line, so all we have on the blog right now is bluegrass. Sigh… ;-)

Lets see…there are some flowers out, so here’s some pictures of them:

DSCN9756

DSCN9762

DSCN9766

These are just a few of the little wonders God has scattered across our yard.

Here’s a picture of our front sign (the one mom painted):

DSCN9768

And one of the beloved dog who wishes that I would quit taking pictures and play with him. :-)

DSCN9769

Speaking of the dog, I reciently found some pictures of him from before he came to our house:

BirthdaysandStacysshower+024

BirthdaysandStacysshower+025

And here are matthew’s chicks (more due to arrive Monday):

DSCN9777

Some of those chickens(by my reckoning) have got to be from the weirdest parts of God’s creation.

Finally, Matthew’s newly revised (and much sturdier [he replaced his 12 1/2″ pvc pipe hoops with 6 1″ steel pipes {bent to spec–he went over to the gentleman from church’s house

and curved them on his trailer–and anchored to the ground via fence posts}]) hoop house:

DSCN9787

DSCN9786

And now I’m running out of pictures.

The DSL Chronicles

Every spring through fall, our DSL internet service becomes spotty. This year, with mom teaching Koreans English, we need better than spotty. So, we(she) have been constantly on the phone with the central office, or shepherding a tech around the house(technically, the service people shouldn’t need to be kept track of, but some of the ones we get need to be told where the mouse is at the computer[really, it’s true!] even though we keep it on a tray like most people do). One tech even came on the phone with the people at headquarters to tell me to undo what he did when he was here. Good thing I was watching. :-)

There was a really nice, knowledgeable guy (definitely a divine blessing) out from AT&T (the owners of the phone line, but unfortunately, not providers of DSL in this area) who checked all the lines for faults, and came up with no problems. He even told us all the technical information to relay to the service provider to backup his story. However, we still cannot seem to reliably and speedily connect to the internet, like we can all winter.

As their last possible fix(or so they say), the service provider is going to order a new line from the roadside box to our house. There’s not much else we can do ether after they throw up their hands, as they seem to be the only DSL provider in this area. The cable line stops up the road, and satellite has too much of a lag. We could look into getting an air card(which gets internet from the cell towers)but that is pretty expensive.

The Close of Band

We had our last band rehearsal on yesterday, and the concert is next Monday. We are playing(not necessarily in this order):

The William Bird Suite(movements 1 and 6)
Abrams Pursuit
Liberty Bell
The 1812 Overture
Marche Hongroise
Salute to America’s Finest

I’m not sure what we will do in the way of brass music over the summer, but we might startup the PotterVilla a Capriccio again.

Friends, Children, Countrymen!

We had some friends from the UP (that’s the upper peninsula to non-Michiganders–we live in the lower peninsula) come down to visit us for the homeschool conference. We got to look after four of their five kids while they went to the big city for the conference. Compared to ‘normal’ kids, these guys (actually more girls, as they only have one boy out of five) are very well behaved, and a joy to have over the weekend. When they come is one of the only times we get out the knex(see knex.com) and build stuff. Since the toys follow basic building principles, it’s pretty easy to build some BIG stuff. While they were here, we built a ferris wheel that stood about three feet high (we have built stuff that scraped the ceiling–and higher). There was some smaller stuff to come out of the weekend too, but not worthy of mention. I plan (if I ever get around to it) to make mother a knex spinning wheel out of the pretty hefty circular center. Knex is sturdy enough that I think it could actually be pretty useful. :-) Mother has this thing about standing up (it’s a miracle that she can even walk, due to a back problem, and a risky surgery–but more on that another day) so a drop spindle doesn’t work the greatest for her. Ether treadled or motorized, I think a knex spinning wheel would do the trick without costing a fortune. Mom doesn’t even know if she likes spinning yet, so the less investment the better.

While the kids were here, Matthew and I slept on the floor, him in his little closet/plant growing room, and me in the office/music room. It wasn’t the most comfortable, but we managed. That way, the four oldest kids could sleep in our room. Their parents slept downstairs in the guest/exercise room (notice that a lot of rooms have two functions? it’s the key to a useful house) with the youngest. We had contemplated sleeping outside, but since the weather was iffy, and we ended up not venturing out.

Current Events

Right now, Matthew is building outside (ether a chicken tractor, a whizzbang chicken plucker, a whizzbang garden cart, or something else I’m not aware of :-), mom is upstairs doing something I’m not aware of, and dad is somewhere I’m not aware of. Our internet is very spotty now, making it difficult to do web programing. Blogger seems to make it through some though.

Self imposed summer school starts several weeks from now, when I can hopefully finish up my advanced physics and trig. Also on the agenda, calculus, art (one of these times, I may finally learn how to draw!) and music should help fill in the time in between doing computer work, helping keep up outside, and operating my brother’s and mine lawn mowing business, dubbed PotterVilla Acres lawn care services. We mow about three of four lawns over the summer (mostly for widows from church, so we don’t charge much–however the price of gas is beginning to change that :-
Concluding Thoughts

I’m afraid I didn’t follow my last post’s advice very well, and sorry for the long post. We did have a lot to catch up on, though. :-)

Let’s finish off with a verse(actually 2):

Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen.

Makes for a nice end of a long post, doesn’t it? When the Apostle Paul wrote it, it was in the middle of a letter to the Ephesians. I still like it at the end.

Anyway, we’ll talk to you all later (whether by reading your blog or in the comments of blogs or whatever :-) and hope all you mothers out there had a wonderful day devoted to you by people who are always devoted to you.

Thanks for reading,

In His name,

For His glory,

And trying to follow His path,

Jonathan Potter
for PotterVilla Academy

Tags: Baxter, Chicks, children, Dog, DSL, Fire Rainbow, friends, Jonathan, spinning, Spring, Sunset, Wind
CONTINUE READING >
2 comments
Apr 16 2008

Wendsday

Posted by Jonathan
Tweet

There’s nothing to do…nothing at all…so I guess I’ll blog.

I’ve been sick for about 5 days. I’ve had my fill of TV, books on tape, and blankly staring at my computer monitor. With sleeping, that’s about all I’ve been doing of late. Oddly, I haven’t even been hungry enough to eat much. But I’m finally feeling better.

Mom has a new piano student that started today, so she had me clean the family room. Since it is clean (mostly, and won’t be for long) I thought I’d show y’all a picture (don’t expect images of the rest of the house any time soon :-)…)

DSCN9752
The fully open window points north.
DSCN9751
The other big news is that there was a fire in the hoop coop last night
DSCN9741
Fortunately, mom was going to water the chickens when she discovered the hoop coop full of smoke, and the sawdust on top of the brooder was smoldering. Since she had a pitcher full of water in her hand, she threw it on top of the brooder. All the chickens seem fine. God’s providence.

DSCN9740

Apparently, the heat lamp bulb was touching the plywood on the top, and started the fire.

Everything has been greening up around here:

DSCN9734
And with the temperatures around 70, it definitely feels like spring.

Matthew has been working over at the Williams this week, who have 500 ewes lambing, and been gone from early morning until late night. Baxter misses him dreadfully, and hardly settles down long enough to pick at his sore (from the neighbor dog, but long story). He doesn’t even know about the fire yet.

That’s about all I can think of to write about, without getting into stuff like politics (ZZZzzz…).

To all, a good night.

Jonathan.

Tags: Brooder, Chicks, Jonathan, Spring
CONTINUE READING >
0 comments

About Us


Matthew Potter


Jonathan Potter

Subscribe by Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

RSS

  • RSS - Posts
  • RSS - Comments

Our Other Websites

  • PotterVilla Pastures
  • PotterVilla Applied Technology
  • PotterVilla Academics
  • PotterVilla Acoustics
  • PotterVilla.net
  • The Chief Mandate

Friends

  • The Deliberate Agrarian
  • Munck's Quiver
  • Bartlett Farm
  • Man of Courage
  • TN Farmgirl
  • Sugar Mtn. Farm

Fellow Workers

  • Generations with Vision
  • NCFIC
  • Heart Cry

Helpful Resources

  • Generations with Vision
  • Grace Community Church
  • Moody Church Media
  • Chapel Library

Slideshow

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Recent Posts

  • The Great Move of 2014 – Episode 3, Trailer Loading
  • The Great Move of 2014 – Episode 2, Barn Moving
  • The Great Move of 2014
  • A Lovely Morning!
  • Winter visits after all….

Recent Comments

  • Munck Family on Jack Frost….
  • Parris Family on It’s a snowy life
  • Marcy on Merry Christmas Y’All
  • Anonymous on An in-progress video walk through my "downtown" office!
  • The Munck Family on A Day in the Life…..

Archives

  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • May 2014
  • March 2014
  • February 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013
  • August 2013
  • July 2013
  • May 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • April 2012
  • February 2012
  • August 2010
  • April 2010
  • March 2010
  • February 2010
  • January 2010
  • December 2009
  • September 2009
  • August 2009
  • July 2009
  • June 2009
  • February 2009
  • January 2009
  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008

Tag Cloud

Annoucements Baxter Bird Brooder Chickens Chicks Christmas Dad Dog DSL Easter Fall Fall Colors Family Fields Flowers Food friends Garden God is Good Grama hoop house Jonathan Mathew Matthew Miscellaneous Music Piano Plant starting Plucker S / E SAICFF Snow Snowfall Spring Sunrise Sunset Taxes The Great Move of 2014 Tomatoes Tools Weather Wind Winter Winter storm

Categories

  • Annoucements
  • Christmas
  • CWVFF
  • Fall
  • Garden
  • Jonathan
  • Matthew
  • Miscellaneous
  • Spring
  • Summer
  • Weather
  • Winter

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org
PREV 1 2 3 4 NEXT