How we keep our chickens

in homestead •  7 years ago  (edited)

When we bought our house two years ago, we were very fortunate two big out buildings were included on the property. One is a garage and the other we call a barn. 20170527_085537.jpgThe barn has a built on section with stalls already built in. One stall was all ready for chickens, complete with nesting boxes and roosting rods, and a little door (we call the guillotine) that leads to an enclosed outdoor coop. The barn had not been in use for I don't know how many years, so it was kind of a scary place to me. There were cob webs all over, and spiders galore. There were also a couple dead mice, and lots of muck to be mucked. :) My husband, @goatgarden, and I knew we wanted chickens, so the first August we lived here, we ordered chicks from Cackle Hatchery. Did you know you can mail order chicks? I didn't! Just place an order and the chicks get shipped to your post office, then the post master calls to let you know they are ready for pick up. My husband picked them up and brought them home. Since they were just hatched, less than three days old, we couldn't place them in the big coop yet. @goatgarden built a brooder box for them. Just a big box with an open top. We put shavings down on the floor, and added a chick waterer and feeder. And my husband also rigged a heat lamp for them that hung from the rafter. The chicks must have clean water available at all times, and heat to keep them as warm as a broody hen would. Right now I don't remember how long we kept them in the brooder. But I do remember cleaning out the brooder and changing the shavings every few days. We also kept a screen over the top of the box so predators couldn't get in and chicks couldn't get out. The little chicks are very cute, and when they hear you coming they get very loud with their chirping!
So eventually we moved them from the brooder that was kept in the garage (the garage had electricity for the heat lamp) to the coop in the barn. I'm sure those chickens were running around singing "freedom"! We started off with a feeder on the ground and a galvanized waterer on the ground, both indoors. Again, plenty of water is a must. Time has passed, and @goatgarden has learned different ways for watering and feeding. He made a feeder from PVC pipe that allows our son to pour their feed in the top, and the chickens to eat out of the bottom. This feeder hangs on the wall. There is less wasted food than the previous feeder. The previous one- as soon as we put feed in it, a cranky bird would flip it over and out of the way, and all the feed would be on the ground. My husband also made a new waterer from a plastic bucket. He hung it up just high enough the chickens can stand under it and drink from the chicken nipples he screwed into the bottom of the bucket. So my son pours water in the top, and the chickens drink from the bottom. And in the winter there is a water heater we can put in the bucket to keep the water from freezing. He ran an extension cord from the garage to the barn for power.
The flooring in the coop is mulch and shredded paper and straw. My kids clean it out every few months and sift it, and we use it as nice fertilizer.
We feed the chickens layer crumbles from the local Producers Exchange store. They also get vegetable scraps from the kitchen. My son has the chore of taking care of the chickens. He feeds and waters them morning and night, and collects their eggs.
Outside the outdoor enclosed coop is what we call the chicken yard. My husband and son first made a pallet fence closing in the space between the garage and barn so the chickens would have more outdoor room. But last month they worked really hard and built a fence to replace the pallets. I think it looks really nice.
My son lets the chickens outside in the morning, and when they've gone in to roost at night (see my previous post for a putting up chickens story) he closes the outdoor coop door and the guillotine.
And that is how we keep our chickens. 20170527_085530.jpg20170527_085502.jpg20170527_085508.jpg20170527_085521.jpg20170527_085207.jpg

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We have also begun to raise our first group of hens after more than two years. I'm going to follow you to read more about your chickens ... greetings.

I am the same Rach - want to start breeding chickens but need to learn more. Up-voted you reply and following. SirKnight.

Hello! It's an evolving education, no? Thank you, and I'll visit/follow your page as well.

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Nice chicken setup! And probably no foxes to worry about in your area? :)

So far we haven't seen any here. But about a year ago there was a baby fox in the road about a mile up. So i know they're around. We do have two dogs that run off raccoons and possums, so maybe foxes, too?

Long as they don't come round during the day as I could be misjudging your fence height but it looks low enough to jump XD You could probably make the chicken house critterproof if you haven't already :)

Yes. I hope we have. I think the fence is 4 ft high. (@goatgarden knows ) We're always on the look out for predators and gaps. :)

I had to convert that (I can't anything in imperial XD), reckon a fox would get over :O but sounds like you have things sussed :)

Very cool! It is a dream of mine to live in the countryside, have land, and raise animals. Very nice post!

No better way to live in my opinion jdawg - good call. SK.

I agree! Hopefully, I get there one day soon.

Thank you! I never thought growing up that I'd live anywhere but in town. Thank goodness my husband is the adventurous one and took us down this road. (I visited your page. Congrats! And i followed. )

Thank you for the kind comments and for following. I followed you as well. When I was growing up, my grandparents lived in the country and raised chickens. It brought back great memories reading your post. I hope to be there one day too.

I love chickens! Terrific coop!! Thank you so much sharing. Up-voted and will resteem. SirKnight.

Thank you! I just visited your blog and am now following. :)
We love our fresh eggs. And the girls, too. We have two roosters, one of which is mean. He's soon going to make a nice pot of chicken and dumplings, but that post is for another day.

Nothing worse than a mean rooster - enjoy.

@igster I hope this helps!

Thank you for actually doing this! Lots of useful info - I really like the way you did the watering system, genius :)

The winters are pretty rough out here so to do this we'd need a proper indoor place with heating, which would drive up the cost and probably make it not worth it just to have few eggs!

Where are you? We are in the Midwest, USA, and November thru February it can get down to freezing with wind chills below freezing. The birds feathers really insulate them. I wonder if there is a heritage breed of chickens that do well in freezing climates. I might have to do some looking in to that. Eggs at the store can run anywhere from $0.89-$4.00/dozen, depending on time of year and other factors. The feed is $8.50/ 40 pound bag, and a bag usually lasts our flock of 12, plus one turkey, about 2 weeks. When we weren't eating many eggs, we sold them for $2.50/dozen. We have neighbors and family that buy them. But the last month or so, I've been making eggs and bacon every morning, so we aren't selling quite as much. I have a friend that sells her eggs, and that's her spending money for yard sales or restaurant treats. :)

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Northern Europe. -22 Fahrenheit isn't out of the question here in winter, enough to make it feel like your nose will drop off after spending little time outside!

How many eggs do you get in two weeks?

@igster you should look at Icelandic chickens. They are great foragers and eggcelent layers, even in winter. Very Hardy birds.

Tough as vikings. I will take a look, thanks.

Anywhere from 84- 108 is a safe guess.

We get anywhere from 6-10 eggs a day from February-October. The birds usually quit laying in the winter.