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Friday, July 30, 2010

Care and Feeding of Chickens

Some of Tammy's great basic chicken care tips:

If you're going to own chickens, you're going to need to know about feeding them.

A few points about chickens that people sometimes don't realize:


No, you don't need a rooster to have eggs. The hens will lay whether they've got a guy around or not. You only need a rooster if you want fertilized eggs.


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Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Egg -Eating Chickens: How to Stop the Practice

Training Your Chickens to Ignore Their Eggs is Important to the Welfare of the Henhouse

One of the most frustrating habits that backyard chicken owners encounter frequently is the egg-eating hen. Most chickens will sit on the eggs keeping them warm or will ignore them all together until they are collected but some chickens peck into the egg and eat it shell and all. This can leave a mess all over the hen house and can rob you of eggs.


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Saturday, July 24, 2010

Backyard Chickens for Beginners: Basic Requirements

Check out the pictures of Brad's great coop setup by going to the "Read more" link:

What You'll Need to Spend to Get Started with a Small Flock of Chickens
There are many reasons why more and more people are looking into raising chickens in their backyard. Some raise backyard chickens to increase the safety of their own food supply by avoiding the risk of large scale salmonella or E. Coli contaminations that seem to happen on a regular basis with chicken and eggs among other foods. Others prefer the higher nutritional content of grass-fed free-range eggs compared to any eggs found in the supermarket.

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Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Housing Chickens

If you're wondering whether you really want "free range" chickens or not, check out Tammy's article on chicken housing:

How to house your chickens is an important decision.

Since you want to keep your chickens alive after you've raised them or bought them fully-grown, you need to make sure they have adequate housing to keep them healthy.

Free range? What about predators?

You must first decide if you plan to keep your chickens contained in a chicken yard or pen or let them free-range over your property.

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Sunday, July 18, 2010

Getting Started with Chickens

A great chicken primer from Tammy:

Chicks or Adult Birds?
It's not hard - or expensive - to establish your own little flock of chickens to supply eggs.

Eggs are the whole reason I got my chickens. Yes, it's cheaper to buy eggs in the store, BUT they don't have the flavor or nutrition of fresh eggs.

With your own chickens, you have the satisfaction of knowing that your care helped produce those eggs and when you need an egg, you walk out into the yard.

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Thursday, July 15, 2010

How to Make a Dust Bath for Your Chickens

A great article from my friend, Marie Anne:


Make a Chicken Dust Bath by Recycling Items On-Hand

Chickens enjoy taking a dust bath to clean their feathers and help with mites and other parasites. Making a dust bath for your chickens is an easy project and can often be made with items on hand or for very little expense. 


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How to Store Eggs Without Refrigeration

It has only been for the past fifty years that refrigerators have been a staple in kitchens across America. Prior to that, fresh foods were stored without refrigeration in a variety of different ways. Households had to store seasonal produce, meats and other homestead products like milk and cheese to tide them over through the winter. 


Storing fresh eggs without refrigeration was a very important task as hens lay more when days are long and begin to shut down production in the winter. Because eggs were a staple not only as a breakfast item but also as an ingredient in many homestead staples, spreading them out throughout the year was a critical skill.

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Worming Chickens Naturally



Treating Your Chickens for Worms Organically and Effectively with Garlic

Like dogs and cats, chickens are susceptible to both roundworms and tapeworms. Chickens pick up roundworms from pecking at food on the ground and ingesting the worm eggs. They pick up tapeworms by eating insects or earthworms that have tapeworms themselves. Chickens that are allowed to free range are more likely to pick up tapeworms and those raised in confinement pick up roundworms more often. 


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