Author: Anna & Mark

Chicken pasture experiment

Chickens on pasture

Chickens in a coopIt’s
been a busy couple of weeks for our chickens.  First, Mark
completed their new pasture on the sunny side of the yard, and
we
moved them over
with
much
rattling of
grain
.  The
flock was thrilled with dry soil to dustbathe in, tender chickweed to
nibble on, and with their new and improved
perch
situation
.  Egg
production seemed to increase nearly immediately, and our white
cochin’s case of diarrhea disappeared.




Meanwhile, I’ve been
putting a lot of thought into this year’s chicken game plan.  You
can read the long version over on our homestead blog by following the
links below, but here’s the summary:

  • We’re going to try to develop the perfect
    pastured chicken breed
    for our neck of the woods.  We’ve
    whittled down our flock to our best foragers and layers and are
    breeding them to expand our flock this year.
  • We plan to raise several small sets of chicks either using a broody
    hen
    (if she’ll cooperate) or the new, high-tech
    incubator and brooder
    we bought.  We’ll keep some of the
    pullets as layers and eat the cockerels and any spare pullets as
    old-fashioned broilers.
  • Grazing chickensWe’re expanding
    our pastures
    to end up with seven (I hope!), giving us a total of a
    tenth of an acre of grazing space.  I’m playing rotation speed by
    ear.
  • We’ll be improving
    our pastures with chickens
    in mind.  We’ll keep last year’s
    two pastures as grain and legume growing space, but will treat the
    other pastures more traditionally (although I plan to add in some very
    untraditional plants.)

As usual, my forest
pasture plans are extremely experimental, so don’t emulate them
blindly.  But I hope you’ll play along at home and let me know how
your own pasture experiments pan out.



After their move, our flock
ran straight for their
chicken waterer.

Fences for chickens

Chicken pasture fenceHow much fence does it take
to keep chickens in?  If you don’t have a problem with predators
and do give your chickens a large, healthy pasture, the answer is —
not much.




Every time we build a
new pasture for our flock, the fence gets simpler and simpler because
our birds aren’t all that interested in breaking free.  Our most
recent fence consists of four foot tall metal fenceposts driven in the
ground about fifteen feet apart with five foot tall chicken wire run
between them.  The extra foot of chicken wire is bent over to lie
along the ground on the inside of the pasture and Mark screws an old
rotten board or log to the chicken wire at intervals along the bottom
to tack it down.




Our chickens could
easily get out if they wanted too.  They could tunnel under the
parts of the fence that aren’t tacked down or fly over the relatively
low top of the fence.  They could even hop straight out the holes
I never got around to patching up on the forest side of the pasture
(oops.)  Despite all of these opportunities, the only time we’ve
seen a fencebreak is when we first introduced our youngest Golden Comet
to the flock and she was being bullied and
Tack down fenceflew over the fence to
escape.  Once
our rooster
stepped in and promoted harmony in the flock
, our birds decided their
pastures were home and not prison.




I should mention that
many chicken keepers swear by electrified poultry netting for its easy
of construction and ability to hold in the flock.  Our permanent
pastures are on uneven, weedy ground where we’d have to put in a lot of
time mowing the edges and moving brush to keep electric fence from
grounding itself, but if you’re rotating chickens through a mowed,
relatively even pasture, poultry netting might be the way to go. 
Another option is to clip your chickens’ wing feathers to keep them
from flying over the fence, but I think that if your chickens are
trying to escape, you should probably figure out why.



Our chicken waterer is a perfect fit for
pastures.  Make a bucket waterer and you can fill it and forget it
for weeks.

Nuts and bolts of rotational chicken grazing

Rotational pasture diagramJonathan wrote in to ask how
we get our chickens into the appropriate field each morning, and I
realized that my blog entries have been very vague about the nuts and
bolts of our rotational chicken pasture system.  Let’s look at it
theoretically first, and then I’ll give you an idea of the specifics of
our own incarnation of the system.




If you’re working with
permanent pastures, you’ll want to situate your coop in the middle of
the area to be grazed, then build pastures like the petals of a daisy
radiating out from that central point.  In theory, you could make
as many pastures as you want, but you should keep in mind that chickens
will spend much less time at the extreme ends of the pasture (unless
you give them a reason to be there, like a
chicken waterer, compost pile, or dust bath
spot.)  I suspect that eight to ten “petals” is about the maximum
you should put on your “daisy.”  Your petals will also be much
less
Popholeregular than they look in
this diagram since you’ll have to work around trees, driveways, and any
other obstacles that restrict straight lines.




You’ll need a door in
the side of your coop leading to each pasture, but luckily these doors
can be quite small.  “Popholes”, as the British call them, are
openings just large enough for a chicken to fit through, perhaps a foot
wide and a foot or two tall.  All of the popholes but one will be
closed at any given time, so the chickens have no choice but to go out
into the open pasture each morning.  When it’s time to rotate to a
new pasture, wait until the chickens are tucked in for the night, then
close the old pophole and open up a new one.  So, to answer
Jonathan’s question, no, I don’t lead the chickens into the appropriate
field each morning.




Double coop pastureAt the moment, we have two
coops, one with two pastures and one with three, but my goal is
eventually to have four pastures radiating out from each coop. 
Although the two coop system was an accident (
the
first house is in too shady of a location for winter chicken health
), I’ve been pleased with the
flexibility that allows me to raise chicks of various ages alongside
older hens.  If you were planning for two coops, though, I’d
recommend making your daisies side by side so that you can place a gate
between the adjoining pastures to entirely contain your flock as you
lead them from coop to coop.