Author: Anna & Mark

Last call for chicken photo entries

Chickens on pasture

Photo
credit: Connor Bruce

Dog watching chickens



Entries continue to pour
in for our
chicken
photo contest

As those who read the instructions carefully will notice, all winning
entries will include shots of our
chicken waterer in action, but I couldn’t
resist sharing some beautiful chicken photos that came with no waterer
in the frame.  Maybe next year I’ll have a category that these
would fit into?




If you’d been meaning to
send in photos, this is your last chance!  Don’t forget that all
entries have to be in by tonight at midnight.

Speckled chickens

Photo
credit: Kevin Poteet

Cover crops in the chicken pasture

Chicken scratching up ryegrassA few weeks ago, I wrote
about how
drought
had made my pasture plants stop growing, so I sent the chickens out to
forage in the woods

Unfortunately, our young rooster hadn’t yet bonded to his new home
(having been moved there from the broiler coop on the opposite side of
the garden only a few weeks before).  So he circled around our
perimeter and ended up in the garden, ladies in tow.  Bad
chickens!  Back into the pasture!




Since the woods no
longer seemed like an option as a summer escape valve, I was forced to
admit that I’d be overgrazing at least one paddock until rain showed
back up.  Rather than degrading my entire pasture system, I
stopped rotating and let the flock scratch the
annual
ryegrass
paddock
bare — I needed to decide what to do with that space now that the
cool weather cover crop had mostly stopped growing anyway.




Luckily, rain came just
as the last scrap of greenery disappeared down our chickens’ gullets,
so I was able to rotate them to a newly regrown pasture.  But what
to do with the bare ground in the overgrazed pasture?




Planting buckwheat in pastureI remembered how much
difference the patches of organic matter in other pastures made during
the recent drought, so I decided to pull this pasture out of rotation
and spend the rest of the summer rotating it through cover crops. 
About fifteen pounds of buckwheat seeds with three bales of straw
loosely scattered over it got me started, and I plan to use
the
method I came up with in the vegetable garden last year to plant back
to back buckwheat crops
until the time comes to
plant
oilseed
radish
.



Planting buckwheat under previously cut cropThe chickens won’t be able to
graze the buckwheat, but they should be able to nibble on the radishes
during the winter, and come spring I’ll seed grass and clover into the
fertile ground.  Of course, that means I’ll have to baby the
pasture most of next year while the perennial pasture plants become
established, which means the paddock will be out of commission for
about eighteen months, but sometimes you have to put up with short-term
inconveniences to build the long term health of a homestead.



Our POOP-free chicken waterer (and some wheelbarrowed-in
garden weeds) kept the flock healthy
while they were cooped up
in a small space.

Pastured poultry in Kansas

Pastured chickens

At the Neuharth Family Farm in Kansas, Carolyn’s birds
not only enjoy clean water, they also have a a well-thought-out and
healthful living situation.  After considering the options, the
Neuharths decided that
Salatin-style
chicken tractors

weren’t best suited for their farm.  Instead, they follow in
Andy Lee
and Patricia Foreman’s footsteps
, allowing their chickens to
free range around a stationary coop.



PVC chicken waterer

Carolyn sent me the
photos in this post as entries to our 
chicken
waterer photo contest

As you can see, her broilers get the best of everything, including
copious, POOP-free water.  If I lived in Kansas
(and didn’t grow my own), I’d definitely make an order for some
pastured poultry from the Neuharth farm!