|
|
1 |
Backyard Poultry magazine 2009 Oct/Nov October/November 2009 Volume 4 Number 5 magazine used 74 pages Contents: Your Voice: Debate Continues Over Poultry Industry Standards Helpful Hints: Warm Water Bucket for Waterfowl A Homemade Waterer Heater Pet Chickens: Equal Rights for Pet Chickens Financial Opportunities: Organic? Free-Range? Health: Combining Poultry with Other Enterprises Fall Season Herbal Wormer & Alternative Backyard Poultry Family Album Alternative Feed: Black Soldier Fly, White Magic Revisiting "Protein from Thin Air" Family Flock Counselor: Set a Spell Breeds: Modern Game Bantams; Pilgrim Geese Breeds: Turkeys on Range Comparing Heritage Turkey Varieties Making History: Opening Day at the National Poultry Museum Youth: Gertrude McCluck: Chicken in Charge Showing Poultry: Junior Showmanship: Preparing Your Birds: At the Show Just For Fun: Michael and the Turkish Heritage Chicks A Tale of Two Turkey GirlsCondition: Very worn, marked out address on front, staple cover tears. Back cover has missing square where coupon was cut off.
Price:
7.43 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
2 |
Capper's Farmer magazine 1953 December Cappers Publications Inc. December 1953 Volume 64 No. 12 magazine used 66 pages Contents:Christmas at the doorstep: Deck your tree with jewels of light sprinkled over the boughs from a high perch on a tractor scoop. Then hope for snow to frost your sceneHow to get - and keep - farm help: Agriculture is vying with industry for men. Maybe we are losing the contest because we have not played up the good points of farm life - real and hidden - over punch-the-clock factory employmentLet's start a boar-testing station: What hogman wouldn't be interested in the progeny of a boar that turns his feed into big gains? Nobody wants profit-eaters at his trough; breeders would have a first-rate selling point in a tested boar with a record of high feed efficiancyAll aboard for smorgasbord! Every year, at the Christmas season, the Herman Jensons of Freeborn county, Minnesota, open their home for a round of parties in the Swedish tradition. Family, friends, food, and fun - they make the hours of preparation worthwhile.Management: A look ahead When does it pay to irrigate? Milk 3 times a day - sleep 8 hours a night Livestock Crops Equipment: It's new for farm and home Make more room around the table Equipment Farm shop It's handy Family Living: Holidays are for memory-making Just in time for Christmas Fun while they learn Economics: Tax ruling on terracing costs Watching the Washington scene Take the farm program out of politics? Now you're the boss of FCA For Women: Extra-duty styles Homemaking news Foods: Favorites from the smorgasbord Gifts from your kitchen Make it early - or make it easy Our whole family makes Christmas candy Country cooking Condition: Pages are age toned and have edge and corner wear. Cover has creases, tears, address sticker, and wear to the edges and corners.
Price:
8.25 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
3 |
Capper's Farmer magazine 1954 March Cappers Publications Inc. March 1954 Volume 65 No. 3 magazine used 122 pages Contents: Management: Don't swear at your landlord - or your tenant Spring work - make it easier Something for the boysCrops: Makes cheap wheat More corn with deep fertilization You can't afford to grow oats! Help your pasture come back They doubled yields by rotating crops around livestock Inspection plus fumigation stops grain damage Canada has 15B resistant wheat Test drainage methods Wheat consistent in response to fertilizer Dairy: "Steam up" cows - get more milk Easier feeding with a bottl He'll water grass to boost his milk income Helps cow carry calf Cows go to their feed Tape can't pick cows Poultry: Worth $40 an acre as pullet pasture Broiler dollars help make little farm big Egg plan on stock share lease New breed of heavy chickens Outlook: Foresight A look ahead Watching the Washington scene What will Congress do about the farm program? Livestock: Testing licked lard problem More lean, less lard! They make sow testing easy Offer mail-order pigs Good beef gains from cheap tallow More beef or milk in early cut hay Walk-in wagon Steers drink from silo stave tanks Conservation: Here's water for thirsty plains Equipment and Machinery: It's new Here's a low-cost feed mill This spray rig can go anywhere Covered silo is self-feeder Farm shop It's handy Health and Beauty: Someone's walking behind you! From sulphur and molasses to wonder drugs Home and Country Life: Have you taken out marriage insurance? You'd never know the old place They've made 'em foolproof! Homemaking news Needlework: Sew very easy Stitches in time Trim it pretty Foods: They baked in a ballroom Coffee-time go-togethers Big meals, little pot-watching Country cooking Pork favorites Agricultural Science: News about research Bug killers don't hurt soil bacteria Condition: Pages are age toned. Cover has creases, tears, address sticker, and wear to the edges and corners.
Price:
8.25 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
4 |
Capper's Farmer magazine 1955 March Cappers Publications Inc. March 1955 Volume 66 No. 3 magazine used 114 pages Contents: Livestock: They sell over 1,000 purebred hogs a year - here's why Hog men get a lesson from broiler growers Cattle spread trefoil Good beef gains from sorgo pasture Atomic energy helping eradicate screwworm flies Fatten lambs on soys? Tough times ahead for lardy hogs Corn Belt produces 77.6 percent of hogs Way to make more meatManagement: A look ahead Foresight My farm problem in Dad! What would you do with this farm? How to make a lease for a irrigated farm This honey stops traffic Machinery and Equipment: It's new for home and farm Dress up those masonry walls Farm shop Here come the new tools Stretch those rubber miles It's handy Poultry: He crowds hens on floor but not at feeders There's money in built-up litter Send 'em to noodlepot! Water saves chick feed Took home disease Farm Policy: Watching the Washington scene Soil Conservation: Dust bowl or bread basket? Keep those waterways working Crops: Growers want tighter grades on soybeans Nitrogen plus chemicals extra hard on pests Vigin soil, phooey! 10 easy steps to pasture profits How corn-growing champions do it! Dairy: Builds dairy herd and farm together Prevents bruised knees You can slash milk costs with better forages New way to clean milker rubbers Silage aids rumen bugs Gardening: Garden crops respond to foliage fertilizer How we grow sweet potatoes She lets her husband in on the fun How much is a farm garden worth? Country Home: The third time - it's charming Straws in the wind Pretty and practical Foods: Mom's best old-time puddings A new crimp in cherry tarts Country cooking Is fish your dish? Clothing: Two patterns - nine outfits! Your glove life Condition: Pages are age toned. Cover has address sticker, tears, creases, smearing, and wear to the edges and corners.
Price:
8.25 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
5 |
Capper's Farmer magazine 1955 May Capper Publications Inc. May 1955 Volume 66 No. 5 magazine used 98 pages Contents: Crops: Test new fields for antibiotic uses You CAN lick corn rootworm Want to try legumes in corn? How much does hail reduce soybean yields? More hay if you kill bugs New nitrogen source Proper timing helps chemicals kill tough weeds Top-dressing oats proved profitable What do tenants, landlords want? Check strips are important Antibiotic ups potato yieldLivestock: Don't vaccinate sows in early gestation Corn Belt feeders rush to stilbestrol Will hogs skid lower in 1956? Meat hog needs $2 less feed Dieldrin kills sheep ticks Fat calves stretch their rance acres Will it pay to feed hogs at market? Middle West is big beef cow country Farm Policy: Watching the Washington scene Wanted! More "wildcatting" in agricultural research Dairy: Don't make your cows eat stinky pasture! Feed less grain - get more milk! Extra can of milk daily Dairymen didn't cull enough cows Cattle worms nick your pocketbook Poultry: Cages slash egg costs in North, too It will pay to hold your best hens Machinery and Equipment: Machinery companies gear for competition Planks shape silage stacks It's new for farm and home Guides chopper spout Cools milk, warms water Speeds clover seeding Farm shop It's handy Farm Management: Foresight A look ahead Your pond: Beauty spot or mud-hole? Country Living: DAD a farm problem - so is Son! Their farm has a built-in view I told a lie for This Is Your Life You can write, too Home Management: The big bad four Gardening: Look what screen plantings can do! Home Equipment: Make your kitchen the tie that binds Homemaking news Peg it with tees Clothing: Breezy and easy Foods: Country cooking Roll up flavor in these jelly rolls Baby food grows up Condition: Pages are age toned. Cover has address sticker, creases, and wear to the edges and corners.
Price:
8.25 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
6 |
Country Gentleman The Magazine for Better Farming 1955 June The Curtis Publishing Company June 1955 magazine used 100 pages Articles: Protect the Family Farm Now by Representative Coya Knutson New Customers for Milk Horsepower Rides the Range "The Handiest Thing on My Farm" Are You Sure Your Crops Aren't Hungry New Ways to Dry Your Grain Make Sure Your Grain is Safe - USDA Page Strip Grazing - Our Newest Profit Maker for Pastures Good Year to Keep Your Old Hens Root Pruning Steals Your Corn Can You Outproduce This All-Grass Farm? Will It Pay For You to Dry Grain? Corn-Borer Sprays Pay Big ProfitsFiction: Panky Peeples' Razorbacks by Dev Klapp Family Features, Building and Maintenance, Homemaking and Equipment, Food, Fashion and Beauty, Gardening Condition: Pages are clean. Cover has creases, edge tears, address sticker removal tear, and wear to the edges and corners.
Price:
8.25 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
7 |
Countryside & Small Stock Journal 2013 July/August Countryside Publishing July/August 2013 Volume 97 No. 4 magazine used 106 pages Contents: Departments: Country conversation Coming eventsFeature Articles: The Lightning Bug Grace and Ashes The woodlot: The Multi-Purpose All American Tree Demise of the Hemlock Meteorologist or Fortune Teller? Preparing for Emergencies Using Traps to Protect Your Investments The garden: It Ain't Just Dirt Soil Test Comparisons Growing Colored Popcorn The homestead kitchen: Don't Sweat: Eat Safe This Summer Beat the Heat With These Super Cool Foods Yes, I Can Fenugreek: An Ancient Spice That's Under-utilized Freezing Peppers and Other Produce Raising Cane: Sorghum Cultivation and Pressing in the Ozarks Homestead livestock: The Joys of a Donkey The cow barn: Hairy Udders Sometimes Cause Problems Pushing Cattle into the Chute and Tail Twisting Tip The poultry yard: 2 Hours of Freedom! Skinning a Chicken Pharma to Farmer: My Journey Toward Food Enlightenment CAFO Threat Close to Home A Rare Breeds Yarn Collection Country neighbors: Tuned Out: Television Watching is Anti-Social Tossing TV Enhances Life Our Downsizing Experience Post Pounder vs Husband Where Do They Come From? Returning to the Country. Things I Forgot Re-Storying Condition: Edge and corner wear. Cover has marked out address.
Price:
4.40 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
8 |
Countryside & Small Stock Journal 2013 May/June Countryside Publishing May/June 2013 Volume 97 Number 3 magazine used 114 pages Contents: Departments: Country conversation Coming eventsAlternative energy: Living Small on 63 Acres 12 Years Off-the-Grid Feature articles: Earthquake! My Experience During Japan's 2011 Disaster The New West Collides with Open-Range Laws Remote Simplifies Electric Fence Maintenance Solar Fence Me In Small Wastewater Facility or Septic System? The woodlot: Who Needs a Forester? The garden: Some Like it Hot From Battlefield to Farmland Honeyberries: A Great Addition to Home Or Market Garden Weeds in the Asparagus Patch The homestead kitchen: Food Storage for Beginners with Little Money Canning Butter Cookbook Contest Winners Can Your Squash Cooking on an Open Hearth When it Comes to Nutrition, Natural is Better Homestead health: Aromatherapy The goat barn: An Accidental Goat Roper Goats and Grain Feeds & feeding: Inside Loading Hay Bunk Holy Mountain Farm Combats High Feed Prices with Hydroponic Fodder How Hard Can it Be? There Is a Trick to Opening Feed Bags The apiary: Bad Queens & Laying Workers Country neighbors: Put Down the Phone; Pick Up a Plant Tips for Better Living Remembering Ellen's Lessons Gardening: A Man's View After chores: Adventures in Forestry Condition: Cover has marked out address, creases, wear, soil. Wear to the edges and corners.
Price:
4.40 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
9 |
Countryside & Small Stock Journal 2013 November/December Countryside Publications November/December 2013 Volume 97 Number 6 magazine used 106 pages Contents: Countryside ConversationsAlternative energy: Bringing Alternatives to the Homestead There's a Hole in the Bucket The woodlot: Minimal Impact Logging Before Craigslist, There Was ... Radio! The cow barn: Pasture Management on a Small Acreage The Benefits of Galloway Cattle Training Oxen: Start with Calves Part I Ultimate Ez Milking Invention The henhouse: Built, Boxed, & Ready to Ship The rabbit barn: Rabbits Make Great Pets The machine shed: Concrete in Tires? That's Insane! The garden: Desert Gardening Tips Growing Organic in Montana The Right Fence for the Job Grown "the Ginseng" of Mushrooms on a Log The homestead kitchen: Mustard: Cherished by Herbalists and Housewives Versatile Table Fare, Courtesy of the Duck The History of Sauerkraut Learning to Survive Make Your Own Tomato Soup Make Home Made Lip Balm From Beeswax Homestead finance: Tips for People Who Inherit a Coin Collection Book Review: The Family That Homesteading Saved Country neighbors: History Lost Using the Things at Hand Close With the Help Condition: marked out address, edge and corner wear.
Price:
5.50 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
10 |
Countryside & Small Stock Journal 2014 March/April Countryside Publications March/April 2014 Volume 98 Number 2 magazine used 106 pages Contents: Country ConversationsHomestead business: Starting an online information-based business Alternative energy: Battery banks: The heart of the system The machine shed: A big truck for a small property Paint your house or barn in three days The woodlot: Plant trees: They're energizing, sustainable and profitable A straight line to community wellness The garden: WWOOFing across America 12 of the most overrated garden selections More High Desert gardening techniques Grow better lettuce Food safety: While you were celebrating The homestead kitchen: Purslane: The gourmet delights of an annoying weed The traditional way to make Crispy Plums in Taiwan Readers recipes: Grape Hull Pie, Syrup, Dog Biscuits, and more Thinking outside the carton Book review: Butchering guide for the novice The hen house: A home-made brooder Raising backgarden chickens The goat barn: Meet the Nigora goat The sheep shed: Lamb health Pregnancy tests for ewes The cow barn: Training oxen, part III: Working a team Scottish Highlands in the North The horse barn: Planning a future horse facility? Condition: front cover has marked out address; edge and corner wear.
Price:
5.50 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
12 |
Hobby Farm Home magazine 2012 May/June Bow Tie Inc. May/June 2012 Volume 7 Number 3 magazine used 96 pages Features:The Brunch Club. Invite a few friends over for brunchFruitful Fare recipesArtful Edibles. Edible bouquets and table arrangements for any occasion"I Do" on the Farm. Host your own wedding or make a living from hosting others. These guidelines will help keep things running smoothly.Tied up in Seed. Wrap you seeds up in fun giftable packages with homemade seed papers and packets In a Fizz. Unwind with a hot bath filled with aroma and bubbles from handmade fizzesWine Science. Columns Lessons Learned Country Fare Garden Gift Garden Home Solutions Nature Calls Home Clinic Projects Homestead Hands On Nest Box Animal Talk Condition: edge and corner wear. Front cover has large tear where address information was removed.
Price:
5.50 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
13 |
Hobby Farm Home magazine 2013 November/December Bow Tie Magazines Inc. November/December 2013 Volume 7 Number 6 magazine used 96 pages Features: Good to the Last Drop. Stir up your kitchen routine by using leftover veggies to create flavorful homemade broths Held in High Esteam. The age-old tradition of preparing steamed breads and puddings deserves a place in your cooking repertoire and at your family table Cold Frame of Mind. Constructing a cold frame for growing garden-fresh goodies year-round Special Collections. From books to sees, see how one passionate preservationist created a library that feeds more than a community's brains Growing Panes. Grow herbs indoors for cooking and crafting through the cool season Fowl Weather. Identify winter waterfowl Rene-gauge Knitting. Craft wintertime accessories with this renegade knitter's tried-and-true techniquesColumns: Lessons Learned Country Fare Home Clinic Project Homestead Garden Grit Garden Home Solutions Nest Box Animal Talk Nature Calls Hands On Condition: edge and corner wear. Cover has large tear where address information was removed.
Price:
6.60 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
14 |
Hobby Farm Home magazine 2013 September/October I-5 Publishing September/October 2013 Volume 8 Number 5 magazine used 80 pages Features:You Can Pickle ThatPlaying with Fire. The age-old tradition of hearth cooking and how to applyA Turn for the Better. Small gardens can benefit from a no-till programBack in Black. Black walnuts offer a bounty of options for cooking, crafting and other usesGoat Power. Harness the power of goats to pull carts and other small equipmentColumns: Dinner Bell Garden Grit Garden Home Solutions Nest Box Animal Talk Hands On Project Homestead Room for Improvement Nature Calls Cottage Industry Condition: Edge and corner wear. Front cover has large tear where address information was removed.
Price:
5.50 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
15 |
Hobby Farms magazine 2008 July/Aug Bow Tie Magazines July/August 2008 Volume 8 Number 4 magazine used 120 pages Features: Southern Heritage Hogs: Mulefoots, Red Wattles, Guineas, Ossabaw Island, and ChoctawsBeautiful Berries - basics of growing strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, blackberries The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Bugs - primer Buying the Farm- myriad of government programs under the Farm Bill that can help fund your land purchase Making Adjustments - unconventional chiropractic care for ailing equine, canine, or bovine Condition: Very worn condition.
Price:
6.88 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
16 |
Hobby Farms magazine 2012 May/June Bow Tie Magazines Inc. May/June 2012 Volume 12 Number 3 magazine used 120 pages Features: Birds of Another Feather - look beyond the standard poultry line-up with these unique birds Welcome to the Fiber Farm - raising and harvesting quality fiber for market A Grape Idea - growing versatile Oregon grapes Smooth Operator - 12 tips for keeping your tractor running smoothly Buyer's Guide: TractorsColumns: Buying the Farm Livestock Q&A Farm Garden Tools of the Trade - supercharge your engine Farm to Table - eggs and herbs Condition: Cover wear. Front cover has large tear where address was removed.
Price:
6.88 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
17 |
Hobby Farms magazine 2012 November/December Bow Tie Magazines Inc. November/December 2012 Volume 12 Number 6 magazine used 96 pages Features: No Small Feat. Have your small-acreage farm and raise livestock, too, with these diminutive breeds that perform AT/UTV Buyer's Guide Mighty Mulch Drive into Dairy. Driving profits by offering drive-through convenience to farm customersColumns: Buying the Farm Livestock Q&A How Do I build a Run-in Shelter Farm Garden Farm to Table - home-preserved gifts Tools of the Trade - wood splitters Condition: Creases, edge and corner wear. Front cover has large tear where address information was removed.
Price:
6.88 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
18 |
Hobby Farms magazine 2013 January/February Bow Tie Magazines Inc. January/February 2013 Volume 13 Number 1 magazine used 96 pages Features:One Day at a Time - break with milking tradition to save time and money in the long run with a once-a-day milking routine Hobby Farms 2013 Buyer's Guide: Farm UTVs Sorghum 101 Taking the High Tunnel Make Your Move - transition your farm to an organic operation Columns: Buying the Farm Livestock Q&A Farm Garden How Do I - build a tiered seed-drying Rack Farm to Table Tools of the Trade - soil-retention devices Condition: Edge and corner wear. Front cover has large tear where address information was removed.
Price:
6.88 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
19 |
Hobby Farms magazine 2013 July/August Bow Tie Magazines Inc. July/August 2013 Volume 13 Number 4 magazine used 96 pages Features: Rehabilitating Rover. A failed livestock-guardian dog can unlearn bad habits and replace them with good ones when properly trained and tended Exceptionally Marketable. The five herbs that will set your market stand apart from the competition, and get tips for growing, harvesting and selling them Pollinator Central. Native bees for increased pollination and better harvests with these techniques for providing suitable habitats Hold the Line. Keep deer from infiltrating your garden defenses with these fencing tricks Farming the Forest. How planting a few trees can improve pasture and livestock healthColumns: Buying the Farm Livestock Q&A Farm Garden How Do I graft tomatoes Tools of the Trade - chain saw Safety Well Seasoned Condition: edge and corner wear. Front cover has large tear where address information was removed.
Price:
6.88 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
20 |
John Deere 410 and 420 Loaders Operator's Manual Deere & Company 1998 softcover used 8 1/2 inches by 11 inches tall Contents: Safety Prepare the Tractor Controls Detaching the Loader Attaching the Loader Transporting Operating the Loader Attachments Lubrication and Maintenance Condition: Pages are crisp and clean. Binding is tight. Cover has rubbing wear, creases, tears, and wear to the edges and corners.
Price:
11.00 USD
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|