Author: Anna & Mark

You go all out with your instructions

Chickens in a coopI received your package of 3
pack
homemade chicken
waterer kit
plus the
video CD.




You go all out with your
instructions!! Great job. Looks great.




I’ll be building a
chicken tractor and small hen house in the spring. I kept up to 3 dozen
hens for over 10 years but age and health forced me to cut back 2 years
ago. Last winter I had 6 hens but I let them go mid summer too.




Addicted. Just can’t
stand store bought eggs. I have plans (in my head) for a 6×8 foot
insulated and heated house to hold 3 hens for my own use. I like giving
them lots of room.




I’ll put a pair of
wheels on it to drag it around on the grass along with a detatched
chicken tractor. In the winter I bring it down from my field to behind
the house.




I like the idea of clean
water.



— Jim



We love hearing from
folks like Jim who are willing to get back into chickens because our
waterers make the care so simple.  Good luck with your new flock,
Jim!

Chicken perches

Chicken perching outside

The hardest thing about
making the switch from chicken
tractors
to a chicken
pasture
is that our tractored chickens were not keen on the idea of
roosting in their coop!  I was excited to be collecting their
manure in a deep
bedding of straw and autumn leaves
, but the flock didn’t
cooperate.  Instead, they roosted here and there around the
pasture, happy to enjoy the warm autumn days.




Adding roosts to a chicken coopMark tried everything he could think of to get
them to perch inside, but finally cold weather did the job for
us.  Soon, we had a flock perching just where we wished they
wouldn’t — on the edges of the nest boxes so that they pooped all
over the clean eggs.  Yuck!  Didn’t we convert over to the
Avian Aqua Miser specifically to prevent
handling chicken poop?




After testing out
several different options we discovered that our flock cared about only
one thing when choosing their indoor perching location —
height.  Despite what many people report, branches and lumber are
equal in the eyes of chickens.  All our chickens really seem to
care about is being as high up as possible.  Once Mark lowered the
nest boxes and raised the roosts, the chickens were finally settling in
for the evening just where we hoped they would.  Now we have warm
chickens, clean eggs, and deep litter composting for next  year’s
garden — perfection.

Chickens on a perch

Worm Cafe

Worm CafeFor
any of you who might be considering
following
Harvey Ussery’s lead and creating large scale worm bins for your
chickens
, The Worm Cafe is a good book to
read.  I excerpted a lot of the highlights a couple of weeks ago
on our homestead blog, including:

Turning cafeteria waste
into food for our chickens and garden is one of our goals for 2011, and
I’d love to hear from anyone who’s put a similar idea into
practice.  Did you find other information sources even more
useful?  Leave a comment and let me know!



Our homemade chicken
waterer
makes
keeping chickens easy and fun.