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POULTRY IN MOTION: Backyard Birds Crowing Business, Hobby

When it comes to their favorite fowl, you might say Danny Eiland and Glen Cryar are birds of a feather.

For Eiland, its Red Rangers, Johnny Grays, Golden Nuggets and those unforgettable Naked Necks.

For Cryar, its Buff-Laced Old English, White-Crested Black Polish, White-Crested Cuckoo and those long-legged Modern English Games.

Yet, no matter what the breed or variety, one thing is …

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 …

A COLONY CAGE FOR BACKYARD POULTRY FARMERS

How to build a better birdcage, including diagrams, instructions, photographs.

by Harlan Attfield Raising Rabbits is a Hare-raising Business

A beginner’s guide to raising rabbits, including a rabbit barn, pens, feeders and waterers, breedin…

Be Fair To This Fowl

Be Fair To This Fowl July/August 1982 Unless you’ve owned a flock yourself, chances are you’ll …

Breeding Chickens: Small Business Ideas for Farms

Thinking of breeding chickens on your small farm? There has never been a better time to do it!

Keeping back yard chickens has become a massive movement sweeping through cities and suburbs from the UK and USA to Australia.

Food security and frugality has people turning in droves to raising chickens in the city.

And why not?

Hens are the ideal, low maintenance pet that is cheap …

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 …

Info on Starting to Raise Chickens – Raising Chicks in Your Backyard

So, you need info on starting to raise chickens. And you have the roost all set up and ready for the new inhabitants to move on in. You want to be totally sure that everything is ready when they arrive otherwise there could be utter chaos as you try and get them organized and situated.

Once the baby chickens arrive you will want to examine them extremely well. If they arrive diseased or in …

Sexing Chicks in the Backyard Flock

Sexing Chicks in the Backyard FlockBy R. Keith Bramwell, Extension Poultry Specialist for the University of Arkansas’s Avian Advice – This article looks at accurate methods of determining the sex of baby chicks.Sexing Chicks in the Backyard Flock – By R. Keith Bramwell, Extension Poultry Specialist for the University of Arkansas’s Avian Advice – This article looks at accurate methods …

Backyard Portable Chicken Coops

Portable chicken coops boast many advantages for new or aspiring chicken farmers. The advantages include free fertilizer, pest control and best of all fresh eggs. Don’t be fooled into thinking you need a large farm or several acres to devote to your chickens. There are many designs that can fit easily into your backyard even if you live in a large city.

Portable chicken coops may also be …

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 …

Pets vs. livestock: Cracking open the myths about backyard chickens :: The Ethicurean: Chew the right thing.

Last spring I decided that this was the year I was going to finally get some chickens. On a snowy Saturday in March I brought home six tiny cheepers that I bought at my local ranch store in Livingston, Montana. Two of them died right off, which didn’t entirely surprise me: those fluffballs didn’t look like they’d really committed to life on the planet. My carpenter boyfriend recycled a …