Search Results
Keeping Chickens in Your Garden
Chickens are not hard to care for – just make sure they have plenty of room to scratch around in, a steady supply of food and a comfortable place to roost and lay eggs. They are friendly and sociable creatures; each having their own personalities, and you can even buy rescue chickens from battery farms.
Taking on chickens is a big responsibility. They can live for up to 10 years and will …
How to Raise Backyard Laying Chickens
Okay, now that I’ve done this for a while, I feel like I might have some things to say that would make it easier to get your own backyard chicken flock going. First, you need chickens.
If you order them from McMurray, you can get vaccinated chicks that are one day old. Only thing is that you have to order them in batches of 25. So, you either need to find a friend who wants to split …
Building a Portable Chicken Coop: Housing Chickens in the Back Yard
May 19, 2009Allene Reynolds
Keeping chickens as pets has, in the past few years, become very popular. They are practical because they eat insects, useful because they lay eggs, and are lots of fun to watch. Three or four hens scratching about and singing for their supper makes for pleasant contentment. But where do you keep them?
Housing the Chickens
There are many plans, from …
Chicken Nesting Boxes And Accesories: How To Make Chicken Nesting Boxes. Chicken Laying Boxes Made Easy
There are a few ways we can save money if we are on a fairly tight budget and that is to make Chicken Nesting Boxes or Laying Boxes ourselves.
Although keeping Chickens at Home, as Pets, or, as is more often the case, for only a few years while they are productive Egg Layers, is not expensive but all costs add up. There are ways to cut costs by making, or appropriating, items that can help us …
Raise chickens: a how to
Chickens are very easy to raise in a small amount of space and can provide you with a nice source of wholesome food as well. Their needs are few: shelter, room to scratch around, a nest box, and food and water. Before you acquire your first flock you need to prepare their quarters.
Housing for Chickens
If you expect to get eggs, you have to confine your chickens at night where you want …
Raising Chickens: Keeping a Backyard Flock
Chickens have got to be the easiest, most forgiving, creatures for a small farm to manage. While any book you pick up on chickens would have you believe that they can suffer from any number of perfectly horrible parasites and problems, the fact is… there’s nothing to them. They’ll call the …
Beautiful Chicken Breeds – Kinds of Chickens
Chicken Breeds – The most beautiful and bountiful egg laying chickens of all breeds of chicken. See bantams, Phoenixes, and polish chickens!
There are many breeds of chickens from tiny to large, flashy to plain, and with a variety of colors in their eggs to choose from. You might be interested in some adorable bantam chickens, or maybe some regal Auracana hens for your coop.
Courtesy …
Egg Laying Chickens for Beginners – Egg Laying Chicken Breeds
We’ve had our egg laying chickens for about 8 months. It’s my first experience raising chickens and there has been a lot to learn.
Egg Laying Chickens for Beginners
When we first decided to raise chickens our coop was not yet constructed, but we went ahead and made arrangements to buy a half dozen pullets (young hens) from a nearby farm. Since our farm was not equipped with a space …
Build Your Flock: How to Select Chickens to Raise on the Small Farm or Homestead
Did you know there are more than 200 breeds of chickens? Why do you care? Besides color, plumage pattern, style of comb and wattles — somewhat cosmetic considerations — chicken breeds differ on everything from personality, to broodiness (tendency to sit on eggs to hatch them), to winter hardiness and even egg color! Plus, some farmers raise them to show, or breed rare varieties to keep them …
The Straight Dope: Are “cage free” chickens really better?
Dear Cecil:
I am far from being the world’s biggest sucker when it comes to advertising gimmicks, but I find myself succumbing to the legend “cage free” on packages of eggs. These eggs cost at least a buck more per dozen than regular eggs. I tell myself that cage-free chickens are probably no better off than their sisters kept in cages (probably they’re just packed tighter into …