Author: Anna & Mark

Pastured Poultry Profits

Pastured Poultry ProfitsI’ve been putting off reading
Joel Salatin’s
Pastured
Poultry Profits

because I have no interest in running a commercial chicken
operation.  (To be honest, I’ve also been annoyed by the tone of
some of Salatin’s other books, even though I nearly always agree with
the contents.)




But I shouldn’t have
waited. 
Pastured
Poultry Profits

is easy to read and full of handy information
for anyone trying to make their chickens healthier on pasture.  Of
course, if you want to tractor broilers to sell to your neighbors, the
book is a must-read, since it walks you through the whole process from
start to finish, leaving very little room for mistakes.  But even
if you just have a small laying flock in your backyard, you’re likely
to learn something from what I’m pretty sure was Salatin’s first book.




Perhaps the most
powerful part of the bookw as the newsletters Salatin included from the
early years of his pastured poultry operation.  It was fun to
watch his business grow, to see where he drew the line, and how
appreciative his customers were of the quality meat.




Mostly, though, I
enjoyed the book because it was full of numbers and specifics. 
I’ll regale you with some highlights in later posts.  Stay tuned!



Our chicken waterer is perfect in tractors since
it never spills in uneven terrain.

This
post is part of our Pastured Poultry
Profits series
99 cent pasture ebook
Read all of the entries:

Disadvantages of free range chickens

Free range chickens

Free
ranging your chicken flock has a lot of advantages
(and just sounds idyllic),
but you’ll also run into several problems.  If you understand the
potential pitfalls up front, chances are you can work around them and
give your flock limited or complete access to free range.

  • Predators — Coops,
    pastures, and chicken tractors give your flock some protection from
    predators (not least because they keep the chickens under your watchful
    eye.)  The reality is that free range birds are a lot more prone
    to be eaten by hawks,
    foxes, raccoons, neighborhood dogs, and even your own pets (if you
    don’t train them well.)  You’ll have to decide whether losing an
    occasional chicken to predators is worth lower feed costs and healthy
    chickens.
  • Fence chickens out of gardenGarden damage — Don’t
    let anyone tell you that chickens and gardens mix, because they
    don’t.  Chickens are very good at eating your tomatoes, scratching
    up seedlings, and strewing mulch all over the garden paths.
    However, we have recently discovered a few ways to work around this
    problem and still let our chickens out from time to time.  One
    option is to fence off the garden — even a partial fence can do the
    trick.  We let our laying flock out on the back side of the
    pasture, and they just don’t feel like walking all the way around the
    pasture fence and barn to get the garden, so they’ve been foraging in
    the woods.  Another option is to let young chickens free range,
    then corral them once they reach two months old (at which point we’ve
    found they begin to scratch up the garden rather than just weeding out
    the chickweed.)  Finally, if you only grow vegetables in the
    summer, you can turn the flock into the garden area after the first
    killing frost and let them eat up weeds and insects, fertilizing the
    ground for next year.
  • Roosting in bushesComing home to roost
    The
    more your chickens roam, the less likely they are to come home to the
    coop at night.  This is a problem for several reasons: more chance
    of getting eaten at night if they’re further from home; less chance of
    laying in the next box where you’ll find their eggs; and tougher to
    manage birds if you can’t pluck individuals off the roost at night to
    cull or separate.
    It’s important not to let your birds get into the habit of
    roosting in the trees (like our laying flock did last week when they
    got stuck in the bushes, not realizing they’d have to backtrack in the
    wrong direction to get home.)  Saving a bit of your chickens’
    ration to be fed at dusk is a great way to get them to come home.
  • Chicken poop — Your
    chickens will probably like to hang out where you are, which means
    there will be blobs of chicken poop on your front porch, your walkway,
    and everywhere else.  If this bothers you, you might choose to
    fence off select areas.
  • Unhappy neighbors — Our
    closest neighbor is half a mile away, and I’m 99% sure our chickens
    will never make it across the creek and through the woods to bother
    them.  However, closer neighbors might be less thrilled to have
    chickens scratching up their vegetable garden and pooping on their
    steps.  Good fences make good neighbors (and I’ve heard gifts of
    free range eggs help too.)


99 cent pasture ebookWe’re resting our pastures this winter by free ranging the flock as much as possible, but we’re also taking our own advice.  Once the nine week old broilers started scratching up my garlic, they got relegated to the orchard half of the yard, and we’ve been giving them a snack every evening before shutting them in the coop for a safe night’s sleep.  So far, we’re enjoying the best of both worlds — happy and healthy chickens and a free range method we can live with.

How much space do chickens need on pasture

Chickens on an acre pastureAnother chicken pasture
question that’s been tough for me to answer is — How much space do
chickens need on pasture?  Of course, the amount of space you need
per bird is going to depend on a lot of factors including:

  • the size and age of your birds
  • the quality
    of your pasture
  • whether you want your chickens to get much forage from the
    pasture or just not scratch the ground bare
  • how often you rotate your chickens from paddock to paddock

But I finally found a
starting point from the data in
Raising Poultry on Pasture.  One mainstream
broiler producer felt that his chickens needed 10 square feet of
pasture per bird per week when they were full grown.  In France,
the Label Rouge system has strict requirements that amount to allowing
27 square feet of pasture per bird for their broilers (including the
time when chicks aren’t fully grown and eat less.)  Although the
French
Label Rouge chickensnumber seems much higher than
the American square footage, you should keep in mind that the operation
in question didn’t rotate chickens between pastures, so the birds’ yard
really amounted to about 5 square feet of pasture per bird per week for
the 5.6 weeks that the chickens were on pasture.




As I plan new pastures
for 2011, I’m using 10 square feet of pasture per bird per week as our
bare minimum.  I hope to find time to build enough pastures so
99 cent pasture ebookthat we don’t have to rotate our chickens back into the same pasture
more than once every few months, although I might experiment with
shorter rotations — one week on, one week off — as well.  I’ll
keep my eye on the pastures, though, and will consider drastically
shifting my plans if the ground begins to look bare.  After all,
pasture rotation is really an art, not a science.



Our chicken waterer makes pastured poultry so
easy, you might forget about them.