Chickens for bug control and food recycling.

Nenebynature

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You know, I've often felt a person could make a pretty lucrative living just by driving around the country nowadays and doing that very thing...just killing chickens for folks who have never done it or don't want to learn or even helping those who wish to learn. :)

Lots of people getting into chickens nowadays and they really love the bird and the eggs, but the other part seems to be the sticking point. It's sort of like having a baby...the sex is great, pregnancy is often without too much pain or strife but the delivery is more likely to be a bad experience, but once you do it the first time you realize that it was all worth it to have that little baby. And you can enjoy that little child no matter how horrible the delivery might have been and so you do it again...and then again...and, if you are like my folks, you do it 9 times!

I think, if once you tasted your own chickens, you'd realize they taste just like...chicken. No emotions can really change the taste of the chicken, no more than a hard delivery can steal the joy of a newborn baby, that I have found. No matter how attached I am to a certain bird, they all still taste pretty much like chicken to me.

Sometimes I even imagine the really great birds have a particularly great flavor...but that's all in my imagination. They still just taste like chicken. :D

We've been able to deter them from the flower beds by laying down deer netting and planting into and through it. They don't like to scratch that stuff, so just anchor it down good and they start to avoid those places. Now we don't have any deer netting down and they leave the flower beds alone. That might be different if we didn't have so much space and other areas for them to forage, so a smaller setup might want to just leave the deer netting in place.

I love the deer netting idea. Between my chickens and the cuss word dog I nearly lost my hosta beds this spring. Haha. I love them so much I just had a beer instead of beating them. I got my first 4 chickens last fall from an uncle. At Christmas he asked how they were laying. I responded that three of them laid out just fine however the fourth (an Easter egger) hadn't laid an egg yet. He said he believed he'd have her for Sunday dinner. I said no way not Betty. He laughed a deep belly laugh so hard because I named them ha ha. She must have sensed The suggestion of her eminent demise and started laying shortly after the new year.

My chickens are pets for the most part. I do appreciate their eggs and occasionally sell them. I eat a lot of chicken, and I have been thinking lately about what it says about me that I support those companies who treat the chickens so poorly. I will probably eventually get around to the idea processing my own chickens. I may have to stop naming them though!

I hadn't really thought about it, but the ticks and fleas have been nearly nonexistent this year compared to the last few years. I guess I can attribute that to my girls free ranging most days at least part of the day.
 

Nenebynature

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I've been rotating my chickens around the gardens and tossing all my compost right in with them. Sure beats having to shovel it up and haul it to the desired spot. They do all the turning for me too. :D (This pic is of last year's garden, btw. This year's was a mess of weeds.)

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Processing the old hens is always just a little bit harder for me than the cockerels or CX for meat. We've got 8 EE hens to do as soon as they hit moult. They've been great layers, laid some really nice blue/green eggs.

We bought 6 Bourbon Red turkey poults last month to try our hand at for the first time and I have been surprised that turkeys are really hard to keep alive! I have 2 remaining which are strong and growing well. The others just dropped off randomly like flies. These were supposed to be next Easter's dinner, but I was hoping to have a couple of hens to keep for breeding and buy a new, unrelated tom. I'm afraid I'll get attached to them now after rooting so fervently for them to live. :rolleyes:
What a beautiful view!!!
 

Nenebynature

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Mine will get them if they find them low enough and they will eat them like Pez if I empty the traps out on the ground for them...crunch, crunch, crunch...makes my spine crawl, that sound. :sick
I have been hand picking them off of my roses and letting the girls eat the from my hand. I NEVER would have touched them before I had chickens. After the damage they've done this year to my roses though I happily pick them and feed them to the girls!
 

Nenebynature

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The new chicks started hatching out Tuesday, a bit early. Of 2 dozen eggs, only 6 hatched out. I think keeping the broodies together in pairs may have caused them to jostle the eggs too much. They do co-parent well though. One is a neurotic helicopter mama and the other is laid back and calm. I have to wear welding gloves to put feed or water in the pen or pick up the chicks. Helicopter mom is mean, comes at you like a fighting rooster!


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This is the daddy, Mr. Fancy Pants.
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Savannah hugging a banty.
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My pretty Mille Fleurs. So sweet natured. I love them.
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(ETA: uploaded pics again)

Awwwwe!!!!!
 

Nenebynature

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Get a fishing net to catch them one at a time and shove them inside the coop shutting it after each bird. Keep the door(s) shut until the morning. One week of this and your girls will get with the program. Been there, done that. They are like little kids. YOU are bigger so you can push them around.

Early this spring, I made mistake of letting mine out to free range in the morning thinking I could get them back in before I had to be at work.:rant:barnieI learned a pretty hard lesson that day and said a lot of cuss words and wished that I had a cuss word fishing net to catch them with.:he

Now, I let mine free range after work and all day if I'm going to be home. I'm lucky because the big girls showed the little girls the evening roosting routine and I didn't have to fight them. :woot
 

Nenebynature

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I also eat a lot of chicken. I love the idea of raising cruelty free meat that had a good life, but would never be able to butcher them. City Boy
I'm just coming around to the idea. I don't know if I'd actually be able to do it. I just got a rooster this week and he has been feisty. I would definitely need to have an experienced person to help me. I'm not sure I'm tough enough to actually go through with the dispatch and processing.
 
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