Seven years of Chickens

We have had chickens for seven years now. Not the same ones. There has been a steady stream in and a steady stream out. In between they have provided us with beautiful, fresh eggs and entertainment.

Back in the summer
Back in the summer

This morning, as I cleaned out the hen house, I was musing about why I carry on keeping hens. Last year we had a badger attack which wiped out my bantam (little chickens) flock. I caught the badger in the act. I have been unwilling to replace the lost flock. I don’t want to  provide our local black and white friends with anymore food. The large fowl escaped the attack, although it was a close shave for the cockerels. For the record, I still like badgers. He was just doing what comes naturally to them. It is my job to be more vigilant.

Anyway back to why I continue with our feathered friends:

  • Number one has to be the fresh eggs they provide.  Oh the cakes, yorkshire puddings, ice cream…. Not only great in our kitchen, but I love walking into other people’s kitchens (invited, of course) with a box for eggs.
  • If I position the hen run in the right place at the right time of the year, they scratch and clear my kitchen garden beds to perfection. Plus it is nicely fertilized. They are working on my sweetcorn and broad bean beds at the moment.
  • They help mark the seasons. I am so aware of the nights drawing in or lengthening. I feel closer to the land and the seasons.
Who would have thought it, even hens like sitting on a swinging bench
Who would have thought it, even hens like sitting on a swinging bench
  • The children gain so much from having the chickens. They are confident around all livestock, they take care and responsibility for these small creatures and they absorb knowledge about chickens at such a fast rate. They know where their food comes from and they have seen the cycle of life – from egg to chick, from hen to the end. AJ and BL have even developed a plan to have several more flocks! Ah ha.
A snow chicken. The best use for pampus grass I have seen.
A snow chicken. The best use for pampus grass I have seen.
  • They inspire our art and creativity. We have drawn, painted, modelled and stitched chickens. Even in the snow. I like to think the hens appreciate our efforts. We’ll be looking for more inspiration for our March project in the Craft-Along 2010.

There are more benefits and downsides, but by that stage, I had finished cleaning their house. I went to fetch more wood chippings to top up as nights are so cold at the moment. When I got back, one of the hens had obviously been in to inspect my work.

She awarded me a one egg award.
Wow! She awarded me a one egg rating.

So this spring, I will probably give in and take the family down to our wonderful hen supplier, where they will select a hen each of their choice. But please don’t tell the badgers.

4 comments

  1. We have 4 large girls & banty at the moment plus assorted pheasants (golden & swinhoe) our kids plan flock expansions too (our response is only when we move!)

    btw that looks like a very tasty rating to me!

  2. If he gets to the point of getting pheasants I’d go for Goldens to start with …they have the quietest disposition and are as hardy as bantams…they lay tasty bantam sized eggs too (I know this might sound odd but they lay lots and you can only hatch so many) I’m whispering this… but our’s are happy in a home built 6 x 8 aviary ..it has a flat roof but the wire on the roof is covered by a discreet rectangle of tarp..they can take cold but hate wet. Just delete this comment if you think it might endanger your veg patch…I’m not joking as I have experience of a man and his pheasants… I will quite understand

    1. That’ll teach me to read a comment all the way through before I read it out loud.

      I didn’t know that the size of pheasant eggs were comparable to those of bantams. They sound more useful than I thought.

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