Author: Anna & Mark

Chicken bucket waterers stay cool

Chickens drinking from a bucket waterer

Mounting a chicken bucket watererIn
the past, I’ve used
pre-made Avian
Aqua Misers
for all
of our chickens.  The small size is very handy in our equally
small tractors, adding so little weight that they don’t impact my
ability to pull the tractors to a new patch of ground.




But with 17 cockerels
left, plus our growing chick and its Mama hen, watering the
forest pasture was becoming a chore. 
When we decided to go out of town for a long weekend, I begged Mark to
make me a
bucket waterer to hydrate the flock.



I was surprised to
discover that our chickens adored their new bucket waterer and started
ignoring the smaller waterers.  My best guess is that the large
mass of water in the five gallon bucket stays much cooler, which is
quite a treat given recent hot temperatures.  The experience has
solidified my belief that bucket waterers are the way to go in large
coop and run situations where weight isn’t an issue.



Make your own bucket waterer
using a
homemade chicken
waterer
kit.

Dark Cornish begin to forage

Dark Cornish cockerelAfter
less than a month in the larger forest pasture paddock
, our cockerels have
scratched the place up drastically.  I’m actually a bit shocked,
and am revising my opinion of their foraging abilities.  It took
our flock (larger then) two months to reach this stage
in
the much smaller paddock
.  What’s going on?



I’ve got a few
hypotheses, as always.  Maybe
Dark
Cornish
really come
into their own as they reach
Panting chickenssexual
maturity.  Or could it be they watched the
Mama
hen and her chick foraging
and followed suit?  Or
maybe the vastly increased foraging is an optical illusion, brought on
by the recent lack of rain, which has slowed down the weed growth and
made it easier for the chickens to devastate their pasture.




While I was in the
pasture conducting my photo shoot, I also stumbled across this chicken,
who looks quite different from the others.  Could she be a pullet
rather than a cockerel?  She seems
Dark Cornish pulletto
have nearly no comb and her speckled feathers are quite distinct from
her brothers’.  Suddenly I’m caught on the horns of a
dilemma.  Should I save a hen and rooster to keep the breed going
and give them another try next year, perhaps using the Mama hen as a
foraging trainer?  Or stick to my guns and eat the lot? 
Decisions, decisions!



Treat your chickens to a homemade chicken
waterer
and protect them from heat exhaustion.

Are backyard chickens a health risk

Free range chickensNews stories about the backyard chicken craze
sweeping the nation are nothing new, but the one in
Food
Safety News
caught
my eye.  Dan Flynn wrote:



Nor does food safety get brought up very
often.  Small poultry farms know their chickens might have
Salmonella or Campylobacter, and they know what to do about it. 
Will uninformed city folk mean backyard chickens will spread disease?



The Center for Disease
Control lists a bunch of tips for preventing the spread of disease from
chickens to humans, but the advice  can be summed up in seven
words: Don’t get chicken poop in your mouth.  If your daily
chicken care smells or looks nasty, chances are you’re putting yourself
at risk.




Although we didn’t set
out to clean up the act of backyard chicken keepers, lately I’ve been
realizing that the
Avian Aqua Miser serves that goal.  One
more reason to use
chicken tractors
or forest pastures and to delete that
conventional waterer ASAP.