Author: Anna & Mark

How to keep your chickens from being eaten

Homestead

I summed up ways
to tell what has been eating your chickens in a previous post
, but many of you have asked
for the followup — how to keep those predators at bay.  Even
though we live in the middle of the woods, we’ve only lost a handful of
chickens, so I figure we’re doing a pretty good job of predator control
(without shooting anything).  Here are our top tips:



LucyGet a good dog.  I’m
pretty sure Lucy does 95% of the predator control on our farm. 
Whenever she hears a sound, she tears off looking for the source. 
Nearly all of our chicken losses have occured recently since her old
bones have kept our faithful dog closer to home.  (You’ll first
have to train
your dog that chickens are to be protected, not eaten
, of course.)

Locate the coop close to your house
Speaking of close to home, you can go a long way toward scaring off
predators by keeping your chickens in an area that you walk through
many times a day.  After some experimentation, we’ve started
locating our chick brooder right outside our back door, after which
relocation we haven’t lost a single chick to predators.

Rooster protects flockInclude a rooster in your flock
If you don’t have neighbors who will complain about the crowing, a
rooster will really pull his weight in chasing away predators. 
One winter while our flock was free ranging, a hawk swooped down and
started tearing at the neck of one of our hens.  The rooster made
such a show and the flock yelled so loudly that I knew something was
going on and had time to chase the hawk away before the hen was injured.

Close the chickens in at night
To be honest, I only do this with our chicks, although I could probably
have prevented our raccoon
incursion
by following suit with the adult hens.  To make this
technique effective, you’ll have to combine it with a campaign to turn
your coop into a predator-proof establishment once the door is
closed.  No, chicken-wire doesn’t cut it, but hardware cloth might
if it’s screwed down tightly.

Include trees
and bushes in the pasture
.  During the day, hawks are our
biggest danger, and these birds of prey usually hunt by circling over
open areas.  Tree cover makes it much tougher for a hawk to notice
your poultry, and bushes give your chickens a spot to hide if they are
in danger.



What extra measures do
you take on your own homestead to keep your layers from turning into
fox dinners?



Our chicken waterer is spill-proof, so it won’t
wet down your coop if the flock mills around for a few hours inside
while you sleep in Sunday morning.

When to hatch silkworms

New mulberry leaves

When’s the best time to
start
silkworm eggs?  Probably about
two weeks ago, although I only pulled mine out of the fridge on May 8.



Silkworm eggs

The trick is to time
your hatch for a period when there are plenty of young mulberry leaves
around, and for the sake of safety, you probably should also work
around the
frost-free
date
.  It would
be a shame to get baby silkworms going, only to have a frost nip back
the leaves so you end up without a food source.



Mulberry twig

What I forgot to factor
into my calculations is that it takes about two weeks for silkworm eggs
to hatch after you take them out of cold storage and put them in a dish
at room temperature.  So we’ll be getting a slightly late start
this year, but it shouldn’t be a big deal.  I’ll report more once
we have little white caterpillars crawling around.



Our chicken waterer keeps hens healthy with
POOP-free water while they wait for their caterpillar treats.

A complex pasture means more food for chickens

Chickens and comfrey

First of all, I
apologize for the low quality of these photos.  You can’t talk
chickens into posing unless they feel like it, and when they did,
my camera
was broken
and I had
to borrow Mark’s.  Plus, the day was dark and damp, which makes
for bad photos.  All of those caveats aside, I did want to show
you how our broilers are enjoying their
forest
pasture
.


Chicken on mulch box

I usually like to rotate
chickens out of a pasture after a week or less, but our flock had
barely explored beyond the lower fenceline during that time, so I opted
to leave them in this pasture longer.  I could tell they were
really getting a kick out of the complexity of the environment, and the
mulch
boxes
were a
definite favorite.



Trellised chicken pasture

One of the most
intriguing things I noticed as I watched the flock was that the
chickens walked right up the terraced pathways just like people do,
ignoring the steeper slopes wherever possible.  Maybe that means I
don’t have to worry about erosion on the near-vertical slopes from
chicken scratching.



Chickens in a forest pasture

The only downside of the
glee with which our chickens explored their forest pasture is that I’m
likely to lose their favorite species since I can’t talk myself out of
leaving the flock in this spot until they explore to the furthest
extreme.  The solution to that problem is to break the pasture
apart into smaller sections and rotate through them faster, but I’ll
have to put some thought into how to divide the space without losing
the pathway aspect of the terraces.  In the meantime, I’m enjoying
watching the chickens graze.



The Avian Aqua Miser is Mark’s innovative
solution to the thorny problem of keeping clean water in your chicken
coop.