After spending several evenings and spare moments glued to the Oxford City Codes and Ordinances, my own neighborhood covenants and considering the various and sundry ways to bribe my neighbors, I am finally ready to introduce our newest family members to the internets.
What started out as this:
Waiting to come home with me! |
Strutting hard at 8 weeks. |
I love that picture of #4. What a pretty (although stubborn and sometimes easily excitable) girl!
They are currently living in the rabbit hutch because several things have to happen before their big girl coop is complete. Mostly the building of the coop, but also the removal of the tree Marco started to cut down last year, and the completion of the fence (I know, I haven't mentioned that yet, but it's coming, I promise!). The seem content enough right now though and are really enjoying the sunshine. I am really enjoying them not being in the guest room so everyone wins.
Now to answer some common questions while I jump into more pictures of my girls.
Do you have a rooster? Nope- nothing but ladies.
Going through their "ugly duckling" phase when they lost their down feathers and started growing real ones. |
So, about their eggs...? Their breed lays an average of 250 brown/pink eggs per year, times 4 chickens that's looking at about 1,000 eggs a year once they start laying.
Are they laying eggs yet? Nope- most hens need to be about 6 months old before they lay eggs, so we've still got about 4 more months.
There are few things at cute as a sleepy chicken pile. |
Alright, other than eggs, why chickens?? So.Many.Reasons. They are great, low maintenance pets. Although ours still face a chance to end up as soup (that is yet to be determined), they really are fun to handle and watch. They eat ticks, mice, snakes, snails and grubs. I have no love for any of those things, so the chickens can have at them. They compost like crazy. Whatever bedding we put down for them (grass clippings, leaves, wood shavings, a mixture of all three) they will dig and break down while adding their own fertilizer. Add in their food scraps (plenty of veg and their own chicken feed) that get composted along the way and BAM garden gold that can be mixed into the garden up to 30 days before we plant. Or composted and mixed in all season long. Plus they are natural tillers, weed killers and soil amenders. AND they are way cheaper than the alternatives- tick control or snake poison, bagged fertilizer, renting a tiller for the garden, weed killer, mouse traps, buying a second compost bin, and lawn service to de-leaf our yard... all for about $75 a year in chicken feed. We were sold.
Can we come visit them?? Of course! They love visitors! They get a little excited when I pull them out of the hutch, but they love to be petted and picked up. The neighborhood kids have fully tested the "Will it peck me?" question and the answer is "maybe, but it doesn't hurt." Plus, I am taking them to campus on Wednesday as part of Go Green week, so if you are around the Union between 12 and 2, you should come find us. I'll be the one with the wagon full of chickens...
Stacy, Not cedar. The dust created by cedar can be damaging to their respiratory systems because of the oils created by cedar; pine shavings are better. Check at The Barn, they carry large bales that will last you a long time.
ReplyDeleteLove the post,btw. Your girls are pretty.
DeleteThanks Michelle! A few of the coop videos we watched showed cedar shavings but you are right. After some more in depth research- cedar is out! We have several neighbors who are more than willing to share their leaves/grass with us, plus hay seems safe so we'll be sticking to those. Thanks again!
ReplyDeleteYou know, you could so write a book (or series) with your talent and material!! You have such wonderful potential subjects such as Roo, Nooners, #4, (just to name a few). Maybe start out as a blog that eventually compiles into a book that morphs into a series. Just sayin...
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