Treetop wrote:they DO need vitamin c, but yeah besides that, grass is fine.
Mossy wrote:Treetop wrote:they DO need vitamin c, but yeah besides that, grass is fine.
To the best of my knowledge _fresh_ grass, _fresh_ broad leaf plants, and properly cured hay have plenty of Vit C. Lot's of broad leaf plants are poison, though, so they cannot be fed random weeds or plants out of the garden.
I wish I'd known this sort of thing back when I had mine, we had lots of wild oats, fox tail, rye, etc around. I sold them off because I was running out of money for feed. (argh) No internet back then.
(edit. Can't feed them mower grass, though.)
Rodebaugh wrote:Answer: a pet rock. No need to feed or water it.....so there will be more preps to go around when TSHTF.
or you might as well make a larger doghouse, 'cause that's where you'll be the rest of your life. Maybe someone else can raise them or you can raise them over at a friend's house so you can get them from "the magical back room at the butcher shop".Treetop wrote: they might take you for an evaluation.
Mossy wrote:Mountain beaver (aka "boomers" and "Aplodontia rufa") /might/ work. They are supposed to never get tame or friendly, but are supposed to be tricky to raise. (So were African violets, and now you can find them everywhere.)
Market Harmony wrote:Mossy wrote:Mountain beaver (aka "boomers" and "Aplodontia rufa") /might/ work. They are supposed to never get tame or friendly, but are supposed to be tricky to raise. (So were African violets, and now you can find them everywhere.)
Never heard of "boomers" and "Aplodintia rufa" but if you are talking about women from certain parts of West Virginia, then the rest of your statement makes perfect sense
Treetop wrote:oh come on now... I bring up the utter serious issue of farming a micro herd of rodents, and you guys show up and turn it into a joke!!!!
Rodebaugh wrote:compaired to the dear in Ohio....yes ours are small. A dressed 150lb deer is a dandy here. Ohio allows the ownership/farming of venison. Therefor (IMO) deer have been selectively bread to produce.... large beautiful racks.... . . .
Kurr wrote:With all due respect, with the current global situation this makes pefect sense. Within a short time frame, a few years perhaps at most, IMO, You will not be able to safely eat wild game that has fed on un shielded vegetation.
We ALREADY have radioactive food, veggies, fruit, milk and water her INSIDE the US. It will continue to accumulate, and not only in the soil but will collect and condense in animals higher in the food chain. Eating those animals will cause it to condense and collect in us.
Micro herds can be raised inddors in shielded filtered enviroments and fed from indoor greenhouses also shielded and filtered. The deer and squirrels might be glowing in 5 years time.
Plutonium does not occur naturally in nature and is the most toxic substance currently know to man. It has, I think, 16 phases, with just 1 of them having a half life of 24,000 years, and there are MANY elements being created and released from Japan, from multiple sources atm, and they have not got a clue as to how to stop it.
The globalists and elite have been saying for a Looooooong time they need an 80% reductionin human population. over 20 years while they have their massive underground complexes and stocked foodstuffs ( on our dime) this seems to fit their bill for a HUGE population reduction over a 10-20 year period, as well as another control protocal. If they want to, they just raise the radiation alert and every one is MANDATED to stay in their houses. Easier to round folks up, keep track, etc etc.
the pigs make GOOD sense to me. Indoor herds. Rabbits too, but with a lean diet you need to supplement fat our suffer "rabbit starvation" from lack of needed fats.
Raised rabbits can get fat. Wild rabbits and squirrels get the fat run off them, away from town. A brood doe has to be kept trim as fat makes her infertile.Kurr wrote: Micro herds can be raised inddors in shielded filtered enviroments and fed from indoor greenhouses also shielded and filtered. The deer and squirrels might be glowing in 5 years time.
...
the pigs make GOOD sense to me. Indoor herds. Rabbits too, but with a lean diet you need to supplement fat our suffer "rabbit starvation" from lack of needed fats.
Return to Non-Metals Necessities and Things To Think About
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest