tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5343418039422454577.post3989299959489124471..comments2024-01-12T06:15:58.743-05:00Comments on Hillside Homestead: The Lady of the House's Birthday (Oh, and snow)Couretonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07345010106705079453noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5343418039422454577.post-67739354555644316672013-02-28T13:41:08.627-05:002013-02-28T13:41:08.627-05:00I've never seen a salt pig before, that's ...I've never seen a salt pig before, that's awesome. But yeah, it's the metal feeders that are the problem. Making that sort of hood could work out, I'd have to think about how that would work.Couretonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07345010106705079453noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5343418039422454577.post-38065496561433526082013-02-28T13:16:23.022-05:002013-02-28T13:16:23.022-05:00Happy Birthday, significant other of old friend!
...Happy Birthday, significant other of old friend!<br /><br />"Wintery mix" is a huge part of why no one will ever talk me into moving back East. Ugh. We get something like that out here in the Pacific NorthWet: the ground never freezes, so when it does snow the bottom layer melts, then freezes in the night and then you have snow on top of ice on hills. In a city that long resisted crazy concepts like "plows" or "salt". "Oh noes! We might get salt in the Puget Sound!" Which is a darn salt-water body.<br /><br />For the rabbits' food dishes - do you mean the metal dispenders? You might try a hood-like approach, like a salt pig.Margothttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03888005312548604414noreply@blogger.com