Category Archives: Backyard Chickens

Chicken Press Coverage

UPDATE. Link to article:
We’re on the front page of the Greeley Tribune Sunday Edition in an article entitled Chicken Out (click on hyperlink to see)!

White and Brown Backyard Chickens
Chickens in the paper and with the paper

On Wednesday afternoon I received a phone call from a Greeley Tribune reporter. He asked if I would be willing to talk about our backyard chickens. I said sure as long as we wouldn’t get in trouble for having them. He said that wasn’t the intent of the story but that the City Council is considering changing the codes for chickens in the city limits. I am not sure if they want to make them more strict or less strict. We have not had any problems with our chickens and I think they knew I would be willing to talk about them because I wrote a blog for their website that they published in the hard copy.

Green Foot Chicken
The Americana AKA Greenfoot

He asked me what some of the benefits to having chickens were and if we have had any problems. The benefits I mentioned were:
-Farm fresh eggs with huge healthy yolks
– Bug Abatement
– Free fertilizer! ๐Ÿ™‚
– Local food = fewer caged chickens
– They eat our kitchen scraps, so less waste in the garbage.
– Fun and easy to care for pets
-A great, hands-on learning experience
-Becoming more self-sufficient and self-reliant
– A personal step -along with our garden- towards decentralizing our food system

As far as problems, I just mentioned that one of our chickens died and that was sad, but it was what made us get the chicks which was such a fun experience. He asked about predators and I told him about the hawks and foxes around but that we’ve never had any issues. Neighborhood cats seem to leave them alone for the most part and Kitty and Schnoodle get along great with them.

He also asked if we had an increase in mice because of them. I said that ever since Kitty has been living outside we’ve had fewer mice problems (since he became a sort-of mouser) and that mice are always going to be somewhat of an issue with an open field behind our house (that’s why they’re called field mice!).

He also asked if we had checked the regulations, which we had. I talked with a city planner about a year ago who thought we would have no problems as long as we didn’t get a rooster. We checked our HOA rules and as long as we call them our pets they are fine as well.

Then he set up a time for a photographer to come over and take our picture. We picked last night at 7pm. It was so weird having this huge camera lens right up in our faces while we either chased the chickens around our yard, fed them, held them or just sat next to them. I wonder how the pictures will turn out. The photographer said she thought it would be printed this week some time.
We’ll see! It was pretty fun and exciting anyway. You never know what kind of fallout will happen when you have press coverage though! But you heard it here first! ๐Ÿ™‚

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Garden Mystery: Solved (somewhat)

I think we have solved the mystery plant puzzle. I believe it is a pumpkin/gourd. Here is a picture. What do you think? We have a few of them springing up everywhere in the greenhouse. It is growing so much that it is pushing the potted plants off the shelves.
gourd/pumpkin

Is it a gourd or a pumpkin?

In any case, the greenhouse is so full we cannot even walk in there anymore.

Greenhouse jungle

We also have a few things popping up in the garden.

Curvy Cucumber
A curvy cucumber

Broccoli
Broccoli

Garlic top
Garlic Top Bulb looking down at it

So, this is looking down at the garlic. If you don’t cut the garlic scape as we did earlier in the spring, apparently it creates this bulb on TOP of the plant that looks just like a miniature bulb except it has all these little seed like things coming from it.ย  It’s weird the things you learn in the garden.

Chicken

And of course, what would a garden post be without a picture of some chickens! ๐Ÿ˜‰

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At Ground Level

I threw out a watermelon rind for the chickens and they went over to munch on it. I tried to get a picture, but when I got close, they would scatter, so I layed in the grass and watched. Kitty mosied on over and sat right in front of me. So I got this great picture of the chickens in the background and Kitty in the foreground. The world is much different at ground level.

Kitty and Chickens in background
Kitty in Front and Chickens behind

Then they got curious and wanted to see what I was doing in the grass, so I caught them on video as they wandered around the yard. They are getting so big! I remember when they were baby chicks and we could hold all three in our hands at once.

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You Have Chickens??!

That is the general response we hear from people when we talk casually about the chickens. (We hear the same similar response and incredulity when we talk about Puerto Rico, too!) The chickens are awesome! Here are a few fun facts about chickens that we learned, and hopefully they answer a lot of your questions about chickens. If you have other questions, I’ll try to answer them!

1) They generally lay one egg a day. This is not a 24 hour day, however. Our chicken lays one about every 30 hours, so we skip a day every so often. They lay based on the amount of sun – or day length. In the winter, some breeds stop altogether. This is a natural response so that the chicks would have the best chance of survival (spring, summer, and fall). In commercial enterprises, they use artificial lighting to keep them laying through the winter.
2) You don’t need a rooster to have eggs. You only need a rooster to fertilize the eggs. Unless you have a lot of room or want to have chicks in the spring, don’t get a rooster. The hens are not noisy at all, but roosters can start crowing at 3am, which may make you the least favorite neighbor ever.
3) They start laying at between 3-5 months old. The black one still hasn’t laid.
4) They spend the day on the ground looking for things to eat, but like to sleep up on a board. This is the “roosting” habit. They should have shelter from the elements and predators. A lot of chicken predators (foxes, skunks, weasels, etc) are noctural and strike when the chickens are most vulnerable.
5) They do poop a lot, and their poop is considered “hot” but is excellent fertilizer. We usually just hose out the greenhouse every so often and that takes care of the smell.
6) Regardless of what your egg carton might say, chickens are not naturally vegetarians. They LOVE grasshoppers, spiders, beetles, etc, and they are GREAT at catching them. One day, Kitty caught a baby bird and left it dead on the back porch for us as he likes to do recently (yuck). I went to go move it from the porch but got a little distracted. When I came back about a 1/2 hour later the chickens had finished him off, feathers and all…Is that cannibalism if it’s in the same family?
7) They are “flock” animals. I wouldn’t suggest getting just one. They have their own language and squawk when we come out to let each other know we are there. They are always together, sleeping, eating, pecking around in the yard.
8)- The egg comes out of the same part as the poop, but it is through a different tube (think: our throats are used for food and for air), so they are completely sanitary unless they land in poop on the ground (the shell would be dirty).
9) Overall, chickens can be used as: pets, meat, eggs, feather source, fertilizer, entertainment, bug abatement and much, much more ๐Ÿ™‚
10) Oh, and yes, they are legal to have in Greeley city limits. Other towns like Fort Collins are also considering it.
BONUS! When Britton and I were in Puerto Rico last, they were talking about how chickens are great for catching unwanted critters, especially scorpions. Well, that’ll help you sleep at night.

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