FREE-RANGE CHICKENS
Finding land, getting birds, feeding chickens and selling eggs.
HOMESTEAD HANDBOOK
RELATED ARTICLES
There are dozens of reasons to keep a few hens in your back yard, including pest control and sheer ...
Have an eco-friendly Easter by coloring eggs with plant-based dyes, or preparing eggs from 'Easter-...
The results are in: Eggs from hens allowed to range on pasture are a heck of a lot better than thos...
Tests show free-range eggs are more nutritious and have half the cholesterol of supermarket eggs....
These resources will have you raising chickens in your back yard in no time....
The chickens turn out to forage for themselves on our
place. They don't run wild all over, you understand: A snug
henhouse lean-to along the outside wall of the horse's barn
stall lets the flock come home to roost at night and to
shelter through a heavy rain. During our hard New England
winters, the flock is forced to coop up and live on dry
stores (homegrown, whenever practical), like the rest of
us. But from the first warm days of March till the snow
returns in earnest late the next December, our chickens
range—free as a bird, you might say—to work for
their own supper. Cash sale or barter of extra eggs and an
occasional dressed capon more than pay for what feed and
equipment needs buying, so the poultry products our family
enjoys are free for the time spent looking after the
flock—perhaps half an hour a week, egg collecting
included (once the operation is up and going on its own).
There's nothing new about running poultry free, of course.
It used to be done that way all over. A natural part of
every old-time farmstead was a half-wild flock of chickens
scratching around the barnyard and fields after bugs,
native seeds and berries, plus whatever feed grain got past
(or passed through) the larger farm animals.
Today, though, when you set out to raise your own chickens,
you'll find that a lot of published information tries to
get you into factory-style production, just on a small
scale. Guess the Aggy-school-trained experts don't know any
different. So they urge you to set up a miniature version
of a commercial "broiler factory"—wire mesh cages
tiered up one on top of the other-in your cellar. You
supply medicated water and preground mash, then execute the
inmates after eight weeks in solitary, during which time
they don't get to scratch in the dirt or see the sun or
engage in what passes for love 'n' marriage in Chickenland.
I decided early on that I wouldn't raise plastic chickens
on my own place, and you don't. have to either. Here's how
to resurrect those fine old-time skills and raise
egg-and-meat birds as close to nature s way as makes
practical sense anymore.
Prospecting Your Land
The idea is to convince your birds to get out into the
country and eat as much as they can for free You
don't need a lot of land; a flock can find a whole bunch of
bugs and seeds on an acre or two. The more the better, of
course, and our flock has several square miles of wild
mountain to wander over, if they want. However, they
restrict most of their travels to the orchard and woods
that abut the henhouse side of the barn, as well as the
barnyard and a couple of pastures in the other direction.
The flock patrols perhaps five acres in all, seldom going
much over 100 meters from the house. I can't prove it, but
I would think that this is close to the natural territorial
limit for a flock of a dozen or two domestic chickens.
Page: 1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
Next >>