A few years ago on a whim, my daughter Kayla and I bought four Americauana chickens at the local feed store. We bought Americauanas because they lay eggs ranging in color from pink to green to blue. The chicks were about the size of a baseball when we got them and we kept them in a guinea pig cage in the basement. A heat lamp, bedding, water and starter feed got us into the chicken business.
Peep........Peep.........Peep |
Before long these peeping little feathered baseballs grew to softball sized birds and it was time to convert the girls old play fort into a chicken coop and run. I was busily wrapping chicken wire around the 8' by 8' run, not a true run but a place to keep the chickens safe while still too young to free range. While constructing the run, I heard rustling in a tall cedar and noticed a large Red tailed Hawk checking out the chicks. Wow, I had never seen a hawk in our yard. Word must be getting out that free ranging dinner is available. Within few weeks I also noticed other types of hawks. Chickens make good hawk bait!
Chicken coop next to '51 Chevy |
Soon it was late summer and the chicks started to earn their keep and produce eggs! Small at first but eventually the eggs reached the accepted large size. Finally all four chickens got the knack and started laying eggs. Soon we had more eggs than we could eat. A few colleagues heard about these free range eggs and wanted in.
Eggs! |
With winter on the horizon, I didn't know what I'd do with the chickens. Too big too keep in the house, Kayla wouldn't let me hunt them down with a bow and still not enough eggs to make this whole project worth the time. Therefore, we decided to insulate the coop and hope for the best. With simple insulation, a dropped ceiling made of scrap Styrofoam and ground wood chips on the floor, we hoped for the best. A 250 watt heat lamp kept the coop above 10 degrees even when it was -20ºF. Chickens didn't seem too ticked and just hung out and read until April. Once they flew into the snow and decided it was too cold on their feet so back into the coop. The poop typically froze solid so it was easy to clean and didn't smell.
Brutisk and the girls in an igloo......Christmas Day! |
Ahhh the spring of 2010 finally arrived and the chickens decided to venture from the coop. Soon enough they were out all day as the weather warmed. I would let them out of the coop in the morning before work and when it started to get dark they'd climb the coop's stairs and turn in for the night. The have a 3.5 ft long roost pole but love to huddle next to each other. Female thing?
Since the chickens are out all day, you'd think they'd eventually get picked off by a dog, hawk, kid, car or T-Rex, but it never happened (well never say never...more later). They'd wonder over to the neighbor's yard and temp their beagle, but nothing ever happened. The more I watch them I see how at least one of the birds are on a constant look out for predators. This allows the others to wander around, scratch up the ground in search of bugs, fertilize the yard with their N2 filled poop, dust themselves, wander off into the coop and pop out a few eggs, rest in the sun, rest in the shade and stay on the look out for danger. They must feel pretty safe since they wander into neighbor's yards and into the streets. The neighbors like the chickens...........that's a good thing!