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Raising Chickens: Tips to Raising Chickens

Raising Chickens: Tips to Raising Chickens


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  • Take Out Chicken: Protecting Your Flock From Predators

    protecting your flock of chickens

    protecting your flock of chickens

    Just so you know, chicken is tasty; and, humans aren’t the only ones who know that little nugget of information.  If you have chickens in your backyard you may have already discovered the fact that you have to be on your guard at all times from predators.  Goodness there are predators who fly, dig, crawl, climb and slither.  It is good to know these things so that you can protect your birds from as many of those critters as possible if you want to maintain your investment in a backyard flock of chickens.

    With a little bit of pre-planning you can cut down on opportunities that the predators have for thinking of your chicken coop as a take out chicken place.   Consider the design of your chicken coop for instance.  It’s a good thing to build a coop that is up off of the ground either by placing its structure up on bricks, poles or elevating it from the ground level by a frame-work of two by fours.    Having a solidly constructed floor without holes for rodents or snakes to be able to enter the coop is important for protecting your eggs from being stolen from you.  If you must have a dirt floor in the chicken coop; invest in some chicken wire and lay it on the ground and staple it to the building so that there is no way for a digging predator to find their way into the building.

    It is also important to cover any windows, vents or under eve openings with chicken wire, again that is to prevent climbing or flying predators from gaining entrance to the building.  This will eliminate the chances of such critters sneaking into the building unnoticed.

    If your birds are totally free range chickens there is little you can do to protect them yourself, outside of planting many bushes and trees that will provide shaded coverage for them to shelter themselves from flying predators.  However, if you desire to give them the best of both worlds…you can fence in a large area which will allow them the freedom of motion and the ability to dig in the dirt and grass for bugs & worms.   When you plan out your fencing boundaries, plan to include some landscaping perks such as small trees, bushes or tall grass.  The chickens will adore the shelter from the elements that they provide as well as the variety of pests for them to find to eat under the brush and leaves.

    As you perform your feeding and watering chores daily; do a little security check of the premises.   Make sure that your fencing is upright and not bent, nor dug under around the perimeter.  Watch the birds closely in how they interact with one another.  The rooster will usually give you a heads up if there is a chicken hawk or some other flying predator in the area by the way he acts with his hens.   He will make noise and act protective which usually causes the hens and chicks to take cover either under the trees, bushes, tall grasses or in or underneath the chicken coop.   That is his job to protect his ladies.

    Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to do your best to provide a safe environment for your backyard chickens to live, breed, and produce well.  If you happen to enjoy the process…all the better!


  • Backyard Chicken Coop Chickens

    Chicken Tender with the Backyard Chicken Coop News

    Chicken Tender with the Backyard Chicken Coop News

    Hey Chicken Tender here and I thought I would share a few pictures of some of my friends from the Backyard Chicken Coop.

    The pictures below are just some of the other chickens that Jeff has.  He had just let them out of the coop to enjoy the evening scratching for some grain that he just scattered out on the ground.  This is my favorite part of the day… Out of the Chicken Coop where I feel free to strut my feathers.

    The hot speckled chick in the lower middle of the picture all by her self  is Tilly.  Tilly is a 4 year old Speckled Sussex that I have been crowing for ever since I first set my eyes on her.  What a chick!

    I have to keep my eye on the big black fellow in the bottom left picture… that’s Big Black.  he is a Jersey Giant crossed with an Ameraucana chicken, which is called an easter egg chicken that lays shades of blue, green, and pink eggs.  He takes after his Pa and just kept on a growing.  The Standard weights of a Jersey Black Giant at maturity are males-13 lbs. and hens-10 lbs, but they grow kind of slow.  The hens do lay nice big brown eggs though, and are good looking chicks.

    The other guy on the right of Tilly is Wyant.  He is a  Silver Laced Wyandotte…Wyant and I get a long much better. Wyandottes are a nice docile chicken and the hens are a very good layer of brown eggs.

    Now the big fellow down below they call him Jake.  He isn’t really part of the Chicken flock as you really should not raise Chickens and Turkeys in the same coop because of diseases.  Jake is a Narragansett Turkey.  He thinks he is pretty good looking because he is always strutting around, Gobbling, and drumming his wings for his mate.  The pattern of the Narragansett turkey is similar to the Bronze, but bronze is replaced with steel gray and the brown in the tail is a lighter tan. The gray has a slightly golden or brown tint. . . . My preference for the Narragansett is based mostly on a calm disposition and size.  Calm and not to big :)

    The nice looking building right next to Jake is his coop.  My chicken coop is just like it only we have a little bigger chicken run attached to our 8 X 10 shed that Jeff built in just a day.  We enjoy the wild grapevines growing over the top of the building as it gives us nice shade during the hot summer days.  Jeff comes out and trims them back every year so they do not grow to wild and spoil the view of looking at the nice variety of day lillies that he planted just outside the coops.

    Well thanks for stopping by the Backyard Chicken Coop.  I will be sharing some more great tips on how you can get the most enjoyment out of raising chickens!

    Backyard Chicken Coop Chickens

    Backyard Chicken Coop Chickens

     

    Narragansett Turkeys The Backyard Chicken Coop

    Narragansett Turkeys The Backyard Chicken Coop



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