There is a fast-growing movement sweeping across the world. It’s all about urban chickens, and thousands of people are joining every year. Keeping chickens in urban backyards is nothing new, and was quite common at one time. The United States government, for example, encouraged it during the Great Depression, when food was harder to come by and a family had to provide for its members. When small grocery stores started popping up on every corner and began carrying ready-to-roast chickens and clean, white eggs, the need for a small backyard flock to feed the family dissipated.
Your chickens are fun and curious family members and friends. If starting your first flock, have faith that your chickens will become your homegrown guide to enjoying your own backyard. Many people with chickens learn to see a common backyard or household space from a chicken-eyed point of view. What does that mean? Well, depending on your flock members’ personalities, it can range from learning to relax with Victorian, ladylike style to bounding around the yard with exuberance. Either way, chickens will teach you to check out all this life has to offer. They will also earn your respect. That’s what this chapter is designed for: to help you understand your new feathered friends. They are small and beautiful, yet mighty. Respect them for the physical feat they put forth every day—in the form of that egg you eat for breakfast.
Before starting your backyard flock, make sure chickens are allowed where you live. Start hyperlocally by learning about regulations such as those from your homeowners association, then move outward. Check with city, county, state, and federal laws, too. Also, learn the terminology that applies to your area. Some laws state that only domesticated animals are allowed. Technically, chickens were domesticated at one point in time, some 6,000 to 10,000 years ago. Other laws may state that only household pets are allowed. One definition of “pet” is an animal kept for companionship and pleasure. Chickens could fall into that category. Finally, some laws classify poultry as livestock and apply to it all accompanying livestock regulations
You’ve learned that you can legally keep chickens in your backyard. Now, before you bring home your chicks or eggs—whether your first or fiftieth set—you need to prepare. Gather all your equipment and keep it nearby in a handy space. Stock the necessary food, water, and vaccines. Do a once-over of your yard and tools to make sure everything’s in good repair before your birds arrive. To really get ahead of the curve, plan for your coop to include water collection; you can accumulate and store rainwater runoff for watering outdoor runs or a nearby garden or to fill coop waterers
A week does not pass without one of us telling someone about the amazing experience of incubating and hatching chicks. We have hatched out chicks many times, and the twenty-fifth time is just as exciting as the first! It only takes twenty-one days for a chick to hatch. It’s a great project for young and old alike.
If chicks are in your future, regardless of whether you hatch them using an incubator, order them from a hatchery, or buy them from a feed store, you will need a brooder for your new arrivals. A brooder, your new chicks’ home for their first few weeks of life, is a box or pen that provides them a warm and dry place to live, a fresh and continuous supply of food and water, and protection from predators and a potentially harsh outside environment. It does what a mother hen would do in nature.
Now that your chicks are ready to head outdoors, you need a coop, a structure that protects poultry from predators and weather and provides a dry, covered area to prevent feed and water from getting soiled or spoiled. You’ll also need at least one run, a fencing structure outside the coop that protects chickens from predators and keeps them from wandering into inappropriate places—such as your neighbor’s yard.
When building your coop, think seriously about how to predator-proof the structure and any outdoor spaces in which your chickens roam. Perhaps skunks, raccoons, opossums, or foxes live in the area. Maybe you live near prime hawk nesting locations. It is your responsibility to prevent your chickens from living in fear that they’ll be part of the evening buffet. In many places, the law protects wild animals, putting your rights as flock owner second. For example, in the United States, it’s illegal to shoot a bird of prey. Unless you are Native American, you cannot remove feathers from any dead wild bird. Why these protections? Because in the past, animal cruelty was a real concern. Although you may be angry that one of these animals attacked your flock, research your rights before you shoot or capture.
Already in this book, we have discussed good coop design. Happy, healthy birds live in warm, secure coops. But, what about the second most expensive and most important part of keeping chickens, the food? Feeding a hen nothing but scraps, scratch, and leftovers will not help her to live a long and healthy life or reach her potential in egg production. With high-quality feed and a consistent diet, chickens can live to be ten years old. Some even make it to fifteen. The human race knows more about the dietary requirements of the modern chicken than we do about any other livestock animal—not that it’s been easy to learn. Feed formulations are complex, and the specific needs of chickens change during different life stages. Feed mills even hire poultry nutritionists to formulate their food rations to get it just right.
No flock owner wishes illness on any flock member. Chickens are like any pet or member of your livestock family, meaning you should always have their health in mind. Because chicks cost so little to purchase and maintain, some non-chicken owners may consider them expendable. But you, on the other hand, likely consider them integral members of the family. Know this then: Veterinary care for poultry—or any avian species, for that matter—is among the most costly, and poultry diseases are some of the most difficult to diagnose. Therefore, preventing your chickens from getting disease should be a top priority.
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