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Urban Chickens Network blog: keeping chooks out of the nesting box

As I’ve posted before, my chickens like to sleep in the nesting box that’s built into our Eglu.

Since they’re not laying eggs yet, I’ve never put any nesting material in there (pine shavings… all the better to compost with) to encourage them to spend time in the box. It seems they’ve just developed an affinity for sleeping off the roosting bars.

Having read you can put a golf …

Mother Hen and Chicks

from the creater of theICYouSee Handy Dandy Chicken Chart

Don’t worry. Although there are three dozen different tips on this page, incubating and raising chickes with a mother-hen is actually pretty simple.

There are several good guides on the Web about raising chicks without their mother, such as Feathersite, Murray McMurray, and Mulligan Creek, but …

Keeping chickens

Keeping a few chooks in the backyard used to be something only Grandpa did. But it seems the popularity of the backyard chicken with young families and inner city residents is on the rise in Brisbane for lots of reasons.

Read Michele’s blog about chickens and why they are such a lovely part of her Brisbane backyard.

Here are some of the benefits of keeping chickens:

Eggs! It just …

Guide to Hatching Chicken Eggs

When looking to hatch chicken eggs, you should first gather eggs from a flock of hens. Avoid those eggs which have cracked or very thin shells. Also discard any dirty eggs and keep only clean eggs for hatching. A dirty egg should never be wiped with any damp or soft cloth as this removes the protective coating on the outside exposing the eggs to bacteria and other diseases.

Remember that to …

Help Broody hen, what should I do???

Excerpt from the Clucks and Chooks website:

To prevent hens becoming broody it's always good practice to remove eggs frequently, at least once a day to prevent the hen from wanting to sit and nest. If you find you have a broody hen the first thing to do is to encourage them out of their nesting site (I often just pick them up and send them out the coop door).

There are many different …

Chicken Coop – Better Homes & Gardens Magazine

A new home for chooks so they don’t fly the coop.

Chicken coop diagram

Fresh are the best! And they taste even better when they’ve been laid by happy chooks in your own backyard. This A-frame chicken coop can be moved about your yard quite easily and will keep your hens feeling clucky, safe and right at home.

A chicken coop that can be lifted and moved around the garden is a great way …

WikiAnswers

Chickens are active birds who spend much of their day foraging for food–scratching and pecking with their claws and beaks in search of seeds, seedlings, fruits, berries, insects and worms. They also eat lots of green plants, rich in calcium and vitamins. In the wild chickens start foraging before dawn. Perched in the trees, they see morning light almost an hour before we do. Roosters crow at …

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 …

Philippine Franchise Business Investments: Franchising Chicken poultry raising

Chicken broiler and egg production are the most progressive animal enterprises in the Philippines today. The poultry industry in fact began as a backyard enterprise but has shifted to the formation of very large integrated contract farming operations. The growth of tile poultry industry in the Philippines has indeed been impressive but its problems including inefficient management and the …

CHICKEN FEED: Introduction How to feed chickens chicks Information exchange on natural, organic chicken feed and poultry nutrition, free range chickens, pastured poultry, grass-fed grass fed poultry, excellent quality of traditional and modern alternative

WELCOME TO CHICKENFEED!

We are just beginners here, looking for knowledge and health, wanting to start out right. Beginners like us usually choose to use commercial mixed feeds, and supplement with our own blends as we learn more. The many questions that arise can best be answered at the ChickenFeed group at Yahoo!Groups. Please enjoy this website, and post anything and everything that …