Chickweed pasture

Spring chicken pasture

While I’m profiling
individual pastures
,
I thought it would be worth taking a look at chicken pasture 5. 
If I had the space to put chickens elsewhere, I would have seeded
grasses and clovers here last fall and
left
the ground fallow just like I’m doing for chicken pasture 6
.  This spot ended up
pretty bare at the end of 2011 due to moderate shade combined with
overgrazing, and the seeds I planted in 2012 mostly seem to have
perished since I continued grazing while the seedlings sprouted and
tried to grow.



Red clover and chickweed

White clover and chicoryBut simply being left alone
for the winter did wonders for the pasture.  Some of the clovers,
grass, and chicory seem to have survived after all, and the bare spots
in between became home to a dense carpet of chickweed.  I’m sure
the latter will disintegrate by summer, but it’s currently turned
chicken pasture 5 into our laying flock’s favorite grazing grounds this
spring. 




On a grass-and-clover
pasture, the layers tend to get bored with the offerings after a day or
two, then spend most of the rest of the week lounging with only
occasional foraging behavior.  But our chickens ate pretty much
straight through the week on the chickweed pasture.




(I’m envisioning a
permaculture chicken keeper planting a whole pasture just in chickweed
for her flock’s springtime pleasure.  It might just be crazy
enough to work if you could then plant something perfect for fall in
the same spot once the chickweed was gone.)



In one door and out the other

About a fifth of chicken
pasture 5 is much more sad-looking since our birds passed through this
area all winter on their way to grazing in the woods.  The photo
above shows the overgrazed area (on the right) along with chicken
pasture 3 (on the left), depicted on moving day.  I just open the
door to a new paddock and the flock is bright enough to run through the
coop and onto greener pastures.  When they start regretting
leaving the chickweed behind, I’ve already closed up the relevant
pophole.  No more of your favorite pasture for two weeks, guys —
it needs time to regrow.



A chicken waterer at the far end of a pasture
is a tried-and-true way to tempt your flock not to hang out on the
coop’s doorstep all day.

Chicken contest earn egg money and calendar news

Selling on AmazonThis is a very newsy post,
so I apologize if it’s disjointed. 

First, we’re experimenting with selling both Premade
EZ
Misers
and EZ
Miser
kits
on
Amazon.  What does that mean for you?  First, you can
easily add our waterers to your shopping cart along with other
Amazon products without entering payment and shipping information
over and over.  If you have an internet presence,
you
can also earn up to $7.48 for each sale by signing up for Amazon’s
affiliate program and then pointing your readers to our products




Snow on the barnOur second piece of news is
a way for you to get a waterer without paying for it.  We’re
running one last
chicken-related
contest
this
year, and hope you’ll take a minute to enter.  Email me your
photos by Sunday, then check back to get ideas from others’
entries.




Finally (and slightly
less relevantly), Mark’s step-mom is making a
Walden
Effect wall calendar
this year.  Even though the theme is general
homesteading, there will be plenty of chickens included, so keep
your calendar spots open.




Thanks for putting up
with a book-keeping post.  I’ll return you to your regularly
scheduled chicken programming Friday.

Nest-box-construction tips

Hen nest box

Since I wrote my
previous post about
adding
a nest box to the chicken coop
, Mark has installed two more nest boxes, both doubles.  That adds up to
five egg-laying stations in two different coops, which is really
more than we need for the eleven hens outside the chicken
tractor.  But since Mark has become such a pro at cobbling
together nest boxes out of scrap materials, we figured we’d err on
the size of excess.




The great thing about
making extra nest boxes is that it helped Mark figure out the
best-case scenario…which we can share with you!  Here are
my top tips for nest-box building:



External nest box

Your first decision
is: external vs. internal.  External nest boxes have the
positive side that they don’t take up space in the coop, which
means both you and the chickens have more room inside.  On
the other hand, you have to make sure the top of an external nest
box is waterproof and sheds rain away from the coop, and in our
limited experience, it seems to take chickens longer to find an
external nest box than an internal one.  After Mark added the
nest box shown above, a couple of hens took to it right away, but
at least half the hens kept laying in the floor for a week until
Mark put a brick in their laying spot.  In contrast, our
original, internal nest box was discovered and became the prime
laying spot within 24 hours.



Two-story nest boxes

Perch on front of nest boxPart of the reason that
first nest box was colonized so quickly, though, might be its
location.  The main roosting station in that coop is right
beside the door, so it made sense to install the first nest box on
the end of the perch.  I imagine the hens woke up the next
morning, looked straight into that straw-filled chamber, and
sighed with contentment.  Whether or not that’s true, having
a perch in front of your nest box does seem to help matters. 
(Mark also added a perch to the front of the external nest box to
make it easier for hens with clipped wings to get up there.)



Nest box door

The best nest boxes
have a door to the outside so you don’t even need to enter the
coop to collect the eggs.  After some experimentation, Mark
decided
against the option shown above, with a hinge at the
top.  This kind of door has to be held up while you collect
the eggs, which can be a bit ungainly if you’re gathering a dozen
eggs at a time.  Instead, Mark’s new method puts the hinge at
the bottom so the door hangs down by itself when open.



Occupied nest box

My final tip is
simple — try to install your nest boxes in the afternoon! 
We didn’t, with the result that annoyed hens were squawking at
Mark throughout the project.  “Get out of here and let us lay
our eggs!” they complained.




Do you have any other
next-box tips to add?



An automatic chicken
waterer
makes coop care even easier.