'Helping' to weed the garden |
We’d always planned to get chooks. Even when we were living in town. When we found out what the local bylaws were
and saw that friends had them in their backyard we started planning for having
chooks. That didn’t happen, so it became
one of the first things we planned for when we moved out here.
I researched hen houses, I read up about space requirements, I
gave Hubby the basic plans for the perfect chook house. When it was finally
finished (the chooks were in boxes beside me) we dubbed it the “Chookie
Hilton”.
The reality wasn’t quite so flash. It leaked when it rained, it had holes and
gaps, the door made a horrendous racket when opened (it caught on the
corrugated iron around it) and you had to climb over the perches to muck it
out.
Our first chooks came from a local guy who buys in the hens that
have finished their first year of commercial laying. Some have always been free-range and some
have come from battery farms. These six
were supposed to have come from a free-range farm, but I noticed that they
didn’t perch - they’d sleep in their nesting boxes instead. That suggested that they hadn’t been
free-range at all.
I had always thought chickens were fairly stupid, I soon learned
that this really wasn’t true. I also
learned that they were clever escape artists.
One in particular soon earned the name Houdini. After a few months, we stopped trying to keep
them in their poorly fenced area. They’d
figured out that if they went through to the paddock next to them, they could
roam freely and were often seen scratching around on the side of the road. We didn’t lose any on the road though.
After a few months, one got sick. She wouldn’t move at all. I picked her up and put her in the chook
house because she’d been staying outside.
She immediately got picked on by the other five. A friend suggested that she might have been
egg-bound. I hopped on the internet and
looked it up. The only symptom that didn’t fit was that she’d been like this
for more than two days and was still alive.
There were a number of ways recommended to fix this, although many were
contradicted by the next website. The
only one that I had the facilities to do was a warm bath.
So I bathed my hen in the laundry sink. She perked up quite a lot while in the water
but I soon noticed that one of her legs was curled up and she wouldn’t move
it. I dried her off and made her a nest
in the corner of the chook house. Miss 7
made sure that she had food and water within reach. She lasted another 4 or 5 days before we
found her dead. It was a little
upsetting, but as we’d been told when we moved here - if you have livestock,
you’ll also have dead stock.
We were getting 3 or 4 eggs a day from our 5 remaining
girls. After a while we decided to
increase our little flock. I got in
contact with the same guy and he offered me a cheaper deal if I got a few
more. In the end I bought 10 new
hens. The day before I went to pick them
up I found another one of my hens dead.
I didn’t know what she had died from and she’d been partially picked
over by something so I didn’t know if a predator had killed her or she’d died
and the rats had been at her.
I mentioned this to the guy I bought the hens from and he threw
in an extra one for free. He also said
to keep an eye on them. He’d lost a few recently but a feed of dog roll had
perked them all up. This was the first
I’d heard of giving hens meat. They love
mince and dog roll, it turns out and the dog roll contains a lot of vitamins
and minerals that they really need and don’t always get from other sources of
food.
When I got the new girls home, I made the silly mistake of
letting them out of their boxes outside the hen house. We spent several hours chasing them around
the paddocks trying to catch them before giving up.
These poor girls were a ragged looking bunch. They didn’t have many feathers on their necks
and none on their bums. Their bums all
looked rather red and raw. Apparently
they’d come from an organic free range chicken farm, but one that locks all
their hens in a barn until about lunchtime and the nesting boxes had a high
rough front to them and they scraped their bums getting over it. They looked a bit funny for quite a while
when their feathers started growing back - first the soft white downy feathers
in little patches and then the bigger normal feathers.
After a couple of months, I had a flock of healthy looking
birds.
It took us some time to find out where they were hiding their
eggs. My son found a stash of 30 eggs in
a shed - more than half were still okay.
I found another stash of 20 in a pile of cut branches under the
trees. Soon we had more eggs than we
could reasonably use. Hubby mentioned it
at work and got several offers. We were
selling at least 5 dozen a week at his work, this was more than enough to cover
the cost of their feed. We got told off
for selling them too cheaply - I was happy with $4 per dozen, but our first
customer refused this and gave us $5 instead and told us that this was what we
were going to charge now thank you very much.
This went on for about a month when I spotted a ferret. It ran under the house, right in front of
me. I found a dead chook, half dragged
under the feed shed and gone altogether an hour or so later when I went out to
bury it. We bought a ferret trap, but
hadn’t figured out what to bait it with.
About 8:30 that night, Hubby heard one of the chooks making a racket. It was dark, they should all be asleep. Armed with torches, we went looking. There were none in the chook house, but a
pile of feathers suggested that at least one had died there. We couldn’t find any in their normal roosting
spots but found several piles of feathers.
Hubby pointed out to me where he thought he’d heard the chook
and when we stopped to listen, I heard something that sounded like eating. We went over to that spot and there was a
tiny ferret eating one of my hens. Her
head and neck had gone already. Hubby
grabbed a broom and a rake and chased after it.
We were standing by the hen, discussing how to deal with it when the
ferret came back. It ran over our feet
and started to drag the chook (which was about 4 times it’s size) away. Hubby lined it up carefully with the side of
the broom and whacked it. It squeaked
but got up and ran away. Hubby chased
after it, trying to thump it, he got it a couple of times judging by the
squeaks, but it kept getting up and running.
I suggested that we put this chook in a box with the only
entrance through the ferret trap. As we
were trying to set this up, the ferret came back and we went through it all
again. The cheeky little bugger had
almost no fear of us and was determined to haul away it’s prize.
We set up our trap and left it.
Master 14 wanted to be a part of this, so he stood guard armed with a
rake. He came in after an hour and a
half, he’d hit it a few times but it had gotten very wary of him.
The next morning was a silent one. We couldn’t hear any of our girls at
all. Normally their little noises were
the first things we heard in the mornings.
Hubby went out and had a look in the paddock. There were four more dead chooks that he
could immediately see. There was also a
ferret in the trap.
So we caught it, he said, how are we going to kill it? I’d been thinking about that and was going to
fill a fish crate with water and drown it.
That way we didn’t have to let it out of the trap first. Just throw the whole trap in the crate and
leave it for a while. We were filling
the crate and hauling it over to the trap when Master 14 yelled. He’d picked up the trap to have a look at the
ferret and accidentally let it out but had managed to put the end of the trap
down on it’s hind legs and tail. It was
hard to believe that this tiny and beautiful little creature had devastated my
flock so quickly and brutally. It took 3
blows to the head with a log splitter before it finally died. These little
things are almost indestructible.
It took until late afternoon before I saw any of my living
chooks. A grand total of 3. In the space of two days we’d gone from
having 15 to having 3. The remaining 3
wouldn’t go near the chook house. They
started perching for the night on the deck.
It drove Hubby nuts as the side effect of this was a small mountain of
chook poo on the deck every morning. You
couldn’t leave a door open because they’d come inside and eat the cat biscuits. If I was weeding in the garden, I’d have
help. If I sat outside, I usually ended
up with one on my knee.
We pulled the old chook house down and built a new one. The second one is completely hole free, it
doesn’t leak and is much better laid out than our first attempt. They started to lay in it, but unless I fed
them right beside it or the weather was really bad, they didn’t spend much time
in it.
We got a puppy who took out another one. He didn’t kill her, just broke her neck and
left her alive. Then another got sick
and died. We were down to one.
Hubby wanted any more chooks that we got to be contained so we
started work on a big chook run. At a
party we met a couple who were moving into town and couldn’t keep all of their
flock and certainly not their rooster.
We gained Howard the rooster and his mother Mrs Wolowitz. We’re back up to 3.
I saw in a mailing list email a lady who is giving away her
flock (and 2 pigs) so we’re picking up 15 new hens on Monday.
Keeping chooks is an interesting pastime, but not one for the
faint-hearted.
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