Author: Anna & Mark

winter chicken photo contest

Wet chickens

Whether your ground
freezes solid or you’re just dealing with cold rain, winter can be a
tough time for chickens and chicken keepers.  Our winter photo
contest asks you to illustrate happy chickens in the cold weather.

Leafy greens for chickensDo you bring your flock leafy greens or homegrown worms?  Have you come up with a great heated chicken waterer?  Do all of your feathered friends spend the winter in your greenhouse or garage, or maybe perching on your horse’s back?

Snap a shot and drop me a line with your answer and you might win our chick bundle
— two premade chicken waterers perfect for getting chicks off to a
good start, or for keeping your adult flock hydrated, a $90 value. 
The second-place
winner will choose between a 2 pack EZ Miser kit or a 5 pack Avian Aqua Miser original kit with drill bit
.

The fine print: All entries
must reach my inbox (info@avianaquamiser.com) by Sunday (January 19) at midnight.  Be
sure to send photos one at a time if they’re larger than 2 MB
Grand prizeapiece. 
You can enter as many pictures as you want, but all of your photos will
be merged into one entry.  All photos and text will
become the property of Anna Hess, which means I might share them
with readers via our blogs or ebooks.




How to win: The winners will be chosen by votes from our readers.  I’ll post each entry on our blog and on facebook,
and each like or comment on facebook and each like on the blog will
count as one vote for that entry.  All votes must be in by January
25 at midnight.




I look forward to seeing how your chickens thrive in the cold!

Chocking a chicken tractor

Chicken tractor under a tree

In a perfect world, the
ground over which you pull a chicken tractor would always be flat. 
We live in the mountains, though, where nothing is flat.  Add in
my crazy permaculture techniques like hugelkultur and raised beds, and
it gets tough to move the tractor underneath fruit trees.  I want
my girls to tear up some weeds there, though, and eat up any
overwintering bugs, so I chock the tractor.



Chicken tractor in orchard

Chocking a chicken tractorWhat
do I mean by chocking the tractor?  I yank it to where I want it,
then fill in any gaps along the lower edge with cinder blocks and pieces
of wood.  This really only takes a minute if you keep all of your
chocking blocks handy.




The trickiest part of
this endeavor is making sure that no hen sneaks out under the gap before
you get all your chocks in place.  Our Red Stars
continue to be chicken-tractor queens because they patiently wait for
me to fill in the gaps rather than scurrying off in all directions, even
when the holes are a foot high.  I guess they deserve another
round of Brussels sprouts!

Raising snails for chickens

Snail penEven though silkworms
didn’t work as well as planned last year, I still think there may be an
invertebrate we can easily raise to turn free plant matter into food
for our chickens.  One option might be snails, which have been
grown as human food for thousands of years.  Here’s an overview of
my current research into heliculture (raising snails).




What does a snail farm look like?

You can raise snails
indoors or outdoors, with various options available for both
arrangements.  Although it requires more work up front to make a
snail-proof (and predator-proof) pen, the lowest work in the long run is
to make a snail garden, in which case you only have to water and weed
the plants and harvest the snails —
check out this booklet for more information
You can also make a much smaller outdoor snail pen (like the one shown
here) where you bring food to your snails.  Or you can build a
similar pen indoors.




What kind of snail should I raise?

If you’re raising snails
for chickens, you probably don’t care as much about gourmet
qualities.  In this case, your best bet in temperate regions is
probably
Helix aspersa (the garden snail).  Helix aspersa Helix aspersais
a smallish snail with a weak shell, and individuals can reach full size
in one year if well fed (as opposed to three years in some other
species).  Like
most
snails people raise for food, it is an herbivore, meaning the snail
needs to eat living plant matter.  As a result, you’ll want to be
very careful to prevent this snail from escaping from captivity since it
can become a major garden pest — this may be a reason to try out
different types of snails already found in your garden on your chickens
and choose one of those natives to raise instead.




What do snails eat?

Wikipedia lists the following food plants as being favored by snails:
“Alyssum, fruit and leaves of apple, apricot, artichoke (a favorite),
aster, barley, beans, bindweed, California boxwood, almost any cabbage
variety, chamomile, carnation, carrot, cauliflower, celeriac (root
celery), celery, ripe cherries, chive, citrus, clover, cress, cucumbers
(a favorite snail food), dandelion, elder, henbane, hibiscus, hollyhock,
kale, larkspur, leek, lettuce (liked, and makes good snails), lily,
magnolia, mountain ash, mulberry, chrysanthemum, nasturtium, nettle,
nightshade berries, oats, onion greens, pansy, parsley, peach, ripe
pears, peas, petunia, phlox, plum, potatoes (raw or cooked), pumpkins,
radish, rape, rose, sorrel, spinach, sweet pea, thistle, thorn apple,
tomatoes (well liked), turnip, wheat, yarrow, zinnia.”




In addition, the
FAO article linked to above recommends planting snail gardens
consisting of rape, horseradish, leaf beet (for shelter), burdock, and
Plantago sp. (for shelter).  Snails can be introduced to their gardens when the plants are five to six weeks old.



Snail farmFinally,
snails also need either plants or physical objects to shelter amid
during the day, well-drained loam soil in which to lay their eggs,
calcium (either from the soil or added as a supplement) to build their
shells, and plenty of moisture.




How much space do snails need?

In modern, high-density farms, Helix aspersa
can be kept in an area with one square foot for every six to eight
snails.  If you want the snails to breed, though, you’ll need to
give them more space — providing at least 1.25 square feet of room per
snail.  In snail gardens, snails are introduced at a rate of about
150 snails per 125 square feet, or 1.5 square feet per snail.




How much snail meat will I get?

If you raise a
fast-growing snail outdoors, a 125 square-foot pen will produce about 27
pounds of meat per year.  That’s about 9900 calories, nearly all
of which is from protein.  For the sake of comparison, you can get
about four times that many calories per acre from corn, but corn is only
about 8% protein and is much less healthy for your chickens.  As a
side benefit, snails are also very high in calcium and magnesium.