Off to the Ranch #32: New Compost & Chickenian Army

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Heeeyho Readers! More updates from our little ranch!


Happy chickens equals wholesome benefits!

As much as I want to exterminate the chickenian army whenever they destroy something, one gotta admit the benefits of having them around. It's Yin and Yang; Love and Hate. Let's put it this way: We tolerate each other {laughs}.

Our chicken keep the fruit trees plot clean and free of bugs, produce eggs and matter for the compost, and serve as food (as much as I'm unable to kill any animal anyways). In exchange, we feed them and keep their house as clean as possible to guarantee they're healthy — and won't rebel.

Cleaning the chicken coop

Our chicken coop is pretty much spotless after one year and a half. Remember how it seemed absurd to make a concrete floor? It's totally worth the cost and time to build. Easy to clean all the poop and wash to keep pests away. Only once we dealt with some sort of poultry flea, but those proliferated inside the bamboo trellis (that is now replaced with solid lumber).

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Before cleaning


Two weeks of poopery mess is enough to start a new compost. I start by sweeping the floor. Little to no dust comes up, which is great — thanks sexy concrete floor.

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After washing


After sweeping and a bit of water this is the result. I wanted to build some sort of PVC pipe with high pressure sprinklers to automatically wash the floor. Would that be too lazy?

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Water feeder

The water feeder needs some embellishment; I don't like it's improvised look. Anyways. I'm done with the bastards chickens after cleaning the bowl and replacing the water. Healthy chicken equals future benefits!

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Chicken mess cleaned and poop load ready, I grab the egg and move on to the next tasks at the ranch. There was only one egg, but at the moment of writing I collected eight {woo-hew}.

By the way, the price of egg has gone up by 70% this year, despite Brazil's official CPI of ~4,5%. We should never trust official data — not that they are wrong, but because CPI data is manipulated to make numbers look better than in reality. Hello, 1984!

Econometrics apart, let's get to work the new compost. Shall we?

New Compost

Composting is by far my favorite task at the ranch. Most of the time I pretend to be a scientist, when in fact I throw stuff in the box and hope for the best. In other words: I know the basics and tweak the mix whenever it feels wrong.

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This time I'm using dry grass for the browns (carbon) and chicken poop for the greens (nitrogen); a bit of kitchen waste too, also green.

Note: I keep the grass scattered under the sun for a few days to make sure it dries.

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A chicken load of wheelbarrow poop

One layer of dry grass, one of poop. Kitchen waste goes in the middle. A full wheelbarrow is enough to fill our compost box together with the other stuff. The only problem with chicken manure is the smell and the flies; a final layer of dried grass fixes the issue.

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Kitchen waste

I still think the mix is more nitrogen-rich than carbon (more greens than browns), but gotta see what happens before adding extra browns. Is there even a way to measure that? Or is it getting way scientific for something that should be simple {engineer's mind tingles}.

Last step is to add water and cover. Temperatures are beginning to drop around here, so it's important to conserve heat in the mix somehow. The volume should shrink a lot in a week or two, this is when I turn and add more matter. The cycle repeats until it becomes soil.

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Let's see in a few weeks how our compost evolves. I hope you've enjoyed this post and appreciate if you leave a comment explaining your composting methods.

Peace.


Did you know that I have a book out? Check this!

Access Link: https://www.amazon.com/dp/6500272773?

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Find me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/mrprofessor_

~Love ya all,


Disclaimer: The author of this post is a convict broke backpacker, who has travelled more than 10.000 km hitchhiking and more than 5.000 km cycling. Following him may cause severe problems of wanderlust and inquietud. You've been warned.


I'm Arthur. I blog about Adventure Stories, Brazil, Travel, Camping, & Life Experiences.

Follow me to stay tuned for more craziness and tips.



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19 comments
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Great effort to make something beautiful, effective idea of composting.

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Just out of curiosity, how much is one egg in a supermarket in Brazil? Here, the average price of an average egg (not cage eggs but not bio quality from a free range either) would be around 0.30 USD... Used to be much cheaper not long ago...

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Supermarket eggs I buy on Tuesdays or Wednesdays (when they're on sale), it's 15 Reais for 20 eggs, that's about 0.15 USD per egg. That price started in 10 Reais this year, went up until 17 and stopped at 15.

When it's not on sale the price is around 0.20-0.25 USD per egg; or less at farmer's markets.

By the way, how much is the minimum wage in CR?

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I see. Similar like here. The minimal wage here is some 800 USD / month.

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It's 265 USD here 🤢
So there we have it how a simple egg weights in a basic budget. We'd need to take into account cost of living though

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Wow, that sounds harsh... But yeah, we should take the cost of living as a whole into consideration. For example here in Prague, rents are ridiculously expensive. A decent apartment with 2 rooms usually cost more than those 800 USD per month... But people here in this city earn much more than that.

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A friend of mine rents a quite large two-story house at the beach for around 280 USD. I remember in London I was paying ~100 Pounds to live in a hostel when rooms in a shared house were about 90-120 (i've heard prices more than doubled since then). I guess the secrwt is earning in USD and moving to really cheap countries xD

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A two storey beach house for 280 USD / month? Dude, tell him the kick out the current tenants, we will give him 500 dollars and that´s still just a half of the rent we pay here in Prague :D :/ Yeah, earning a First World income while living in a Second or Third World location, that´s the key to a very nice lifestyle :)

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Yup, you heard it. But the bech here is not first grade, cristal clear super warm water though.

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I see. But seafront is still seafront. Don´t you happen to have any pictures? Just out of curiosity...

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Not seafront though, but quite near. I don't have any photos =/
Seafront, if you find any for regular rent, it would be around 600 USD/mo
The problem is finding one, since ppl generally only rent for the summer

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Well, I didn´t exactly mean photos of the house or the property, maybe just some pictures of the seascape / landscape in your area. I didn´t even know you live so close to the beach :)

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Ah! Gotcha, look it up Cassino Beach, Brazil

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I just did and the internet says it´s the longest beach in the world, measuring more 200 km! :D Does it look the same all along the coast? I guess it doesn´t... But some of the photos look pretty cool.

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Yup, 240km of continuous line. It looks the same, but for the most part it's wild (dunes and sea). There are 4 lighthouses on the way and you can drive the entire distance when the contitions allow.

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