Chicken tractor turns hens into pets

Escaped chicken

About a month ago, we
put a couple of hens in our old chicken tractor
for the
first time in years.  I was looking forward to their
scratching and fertilizing powers in the garden (and to not having
those unruly hens flying fences), but I hadn’t realized how nice
it would feel to have a couple of “pet” chickens again.




There’s something
about a tractored chicken that just feels very different from our
pastured flock.  Our two tractor hens quickly took to the
lifestyle and began looking forward to my approach every
day.  In fact, when the nest box door popped open during a
move and they escaped, the hens were already so tame that
“catching” them was as simple as opening the big door, sprinkling
their breakfast on the ground inside, and then waiting for both
hens to hop back into their home.



Chicken tractor door

I’ll probably get
sick of my tractored hens once winter really hits and tractoring
turns the ground to mud.  But who knows?  Maybe it’ll be
worthwhile to keep two hens in a tractor year round.



Our Avian
Aqua Miser Original
is perfect in chicken tractors since it’s light and
easy to hang.

Moving the broilers to permanent pastures

Chicks in a tree

Chickens in the forest gardenThis hasn’t been a very good year for
chickens staying in temporary pastures.  Two days after
I
moved the chicks to the forest garden
, they showed up under the trailer.



Granted, I didn’t do
a very good job fencing them in.  I couldn’t find my other
long roll of the temporary fencing, so I only fenced one side of
their enclosure.  I thought maybe the chicks were still young
enough that going the long way around would be scary, but these
guys are intrepid.



Black chicks on
pasture

Luckily, I had a real
pasture all ready for this last round of broilers.  Mark and
I moved
the
layers
all back
into the same coop, leaving our usual broiler coop and its
associated pastures free. 

The pastures these little guys were moving into hadn’t had rest
periods as long as I would have liked, but I actually was pretty
happy with the results of our overgrazed broiler pastures last
year — they turned into chickweed
heaven
by
spring!
 
One of these days, we’ll have our new coop and pastures completed,
but in the meantime, juggling chickens seems to be working pretty
well for us.



A chicken waterer at the far end of a
pasture helps tempt your flock to graze more evenly rather
than hanging out by the coop.

Red Star chickens

Red Star

I wrote previously
that I’m less-than-enamored of our
White
Leghorns
, but
the other hybrid breed we’re trying this year is a better fit for
our farm.  Red Stars are an
orangish
sex-linked hybrid
developed from a Delaware hen and a Rhode Island Red
rooster.  We chose the variety based on this glowing
description on McMurray’s website: “We have finally found the sex
link BROWN EGG LAYER that meets our strict specifications; easy to
raise, lays large brown eggs, and has a good feed conversion
ratio.”



Chicks

Red Star chick

The photo above shows our Australorps, White Leghorns, and Red
Stars as chicks this spring.  The Red Stars are the pale ones
with a tinge of orange.  One of the perks of the Red Star is
that you’re almost certain to get the sex you ask for since the
male chicks are white and the females are more strongly colored,
making them easy to sex right out of the egg. 

Standoffish chickens

Now all grown up, our
three Red Stars have shown themselves to be very similar to the
Golden
Comets
we had a
few years ago — good layers and quite friendly.  The photo
above is typical of what it looks like when I walk into the
chickens’ pasture.  The Red Stars come running into the coop
with me to grab the choicest scraps before anyone else can find
them.  A Leghorn or two might follow, but skittishly. 
Meanwhile, the Australorps are all hiding behind the rooster
hoping that this scary person who had the temerity to bring them
food won’t eat them.



Curious chicken

Here’s another
typical shot, taken while Mark was installing a nest box. 
“Is this edible?” asks our Red Star.




I’ve written before
about the pros and cons of a
friendly
chicken
, so I
won’t repeat the caveats here.  However, I will add that Red
Stars make excellent
tractor
chickens
since
they’re docile and run toward you when you throw a rotten fig
their way.  Presumably, the breed would also be a good choice
if you were looking for a chicken that would fare well as a pet,
while also producing lots of quality eggs.




Stars (Black, Gold,
and Red) are listed as the #7 chicken variety on the Backyard
Chickens website, making me think many of you have probably tried
them out.  Do you have anything to add for or against this
hybrid brown-egg layer?



Clean water means more eggs.