FERAL CHICKENS

Guest Post by Hardscrabble Farmer

For the first few years we would buy new chicks via mail order. The date was chosen for their arrival, we’d set up a a brooder, a plastic baby pool filled with wood shavings and a task light above for heat. The post office would call when they arrived and we’d make the drive into town to pick them up, opening the box to check on them as soon as they passed it over the counter top. The soft balls of yellow down would be cheeping up a storm, ready for some sustenance after their journey from the hatchery.

Every year we’d choose at least two varieties to test for suitability and to make it easier to differentiate between last years brood and the newest models. We also prefer both brown and white eggs as this mix offers visual diversity at the table when we go to the farmer’s market. In terms of flavor there is no difference of course, but the sight of a wooden bowl filled with dozens of chalky ovoids in varying hues is an eye catcher no matter how often you see it. We have tried a multitude of breeds in the past six years; Barnvelders and Barred Rocks, Houdans, Australorps, Leghorns, New Hampshire reds, Wyandottes, Cochins and Orpingtons.

Certain varieties have proven themselves to be perfect for our climate and methods, like the Leghorns with their prolific production of large, white shelled eggs. Their failing is that they possess flamboyant red combs that are prone to frostbite a condition that doesn’t seem to affect their laying, but leaves me feeling deeply sympathetic for their appearance, red tips gone gray from the bitter cold. Others haven’t fared as well, like the Polish with their insane head feathers who never seem to see the circling hawks before they stoop for the kill. The Ameracauna produce a beautiful aqua colored egg, but only twice a week malking their feed to egg ratio too low to be of service to the family despite what they add aesthetically to the filled carton.

Despite the fact that when we get the birds they are only a day old and both breeds arrive together and grow to adulthood as a single flock, they always lay their eggs as a breed, one nesting box filled with white eggs, another with brown. They do this without prompting, their segregation a part of a natural process that they understand on a fundamental level, unaffected by any form of poultry legislation. The blue eggs, like their Easter-like counterparts, must be searched for up in the rafters or buried in the litter on the chickenhouse floor.

Care for chicks is fairly simple provided that there is a space where they can be safely kept until they shed their down and develop feathers. We add a little maple syrup and vinegar to their water for energy and to stimulate digestive health, make sure they always have a good supply of feed and change the shaving regularly. They entertain themselves as chickens are wont to do by making excited sounds and furtive moves continuously and for no apparent reason. Their biggest threat is their tendency to jam themselves into knots for warmth, making suffocation an occupational hazard. The round shape of the baby pool makes it harder to find a spot that even the weakest can’t get out of if hard pressed.

We wind up wrapping it with cardboard after a couple of days to prevent jump outs and to keep mature hens from jumping in should they wind up in their enclosure. It take only a few weeks for the chicks to develop into pullets and at this stage we usually separate the cockerels from the future layers to fatten them up for meat. We’ll hang on to the largest most aggressive so that we always have a dominant rooster to look over and fertilize the eggs of our new flock. Within four months, more or less, they will begin to lay eggs, small ones without yolks at first, but increasingly larger and more frequently as they reach maturity.

We free range our birds and give them access to a mobile hen house during the warmer months. The chicken tractor is a modified hay wagon with an enclosure mounted on top secure against predators and lined with nesting boxes for collection of eggs and roosts for nighttime accommodations. The rest of their time is spent living in the open under the supervision of their rooster and the guardian dogs. They feed on insects and grasses, seeds and larvae left behind in cow patties on pasture. Their constant pecking, dispersal of wastes, dropping of manure and scratching at the soil reduce the load of insects without need for chemicals, fertilize the soil without the addition of oil based NPK and add flavor and nutrition to their eggs and flesh.

A range free egg, when you crack it open, features a yolk almost orange from beta carotene that stands up in the pan like a golf ball, surrounded by a tight, well defined albumen rather than the watery ooze that is found in commercially produced CAFO eggs. The flavor is hard to describe, but buttery and rich fit the bill as well as anything else. The yolks make terrific mayonnaise and whipped with lemon juice and butter a hollandaise sauce that you’ll never forget. A the end of the season before the leaves are completely off the trees we introduce them to their winter quarters behind the house, a three stall chicken house with lights to offset the growing darkness and solid walls to keep out both the cold as well as predators.

Most of the chickens will take to the coop without much trouble because it is filled with nesting boxes and we feed them inside, but every year a few of the chickens will resist and take every opportunity to get back outdoors and rejoin the cattle or sheep. No matter how often we round them up and bring them back to the coop they soon find themselves back outside, roosting inside the hay barn at night, picking through the wastes left behind the pig’s trough, or feeding on bits of silage or hay where the cows feed.

We do not care for these chickens since they no longer leave eggs for us, but accommodate ourselves to a sort of mutual indifference to each others presence. How they survive the coldest nights was a mystery to me until I spent one night in the barn awaiting a calf. The chickens wait until the cattle are bedded down for the night and then look for a spot between them, capitalizing on the body heat of mammals at rest. Twice I have caught them perched on the back of a sleeping bull, eyes closed in sleep.

We have two feral hens this year, a New Hampshire Red and a Welsummer. They have made it through the hardest New England winter in recent memory without benefit of a henhouse or regular feed and look none the worse for it. They keep a wary distance from me whenever I am out doing chores and I have an exceptionally high level of admiration for them and their independence. I can see in those two chickens a reverse order of the domestication process, an animal that slowly circles the human sphere because of the elements of safety and providence, in turn offering up it’s output in eggs and eventually in meat.

Chickens are easy in a way that larger domesticated animals are not and rarely, if ever leave the farm for any reason that doesn’t involve being eaten by a wild animal. This morning I watched those two chickens for a while making their way between the hooves of the herd looking for dropped seed from the bales, a part of our farm, but aloof and I thought of how good they will taste when I make a coq au vin next Sunday. Membership, as they say, has it’s privilege.

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18 Comments
Sonic
Sonic
March 21, 2015 11:23 am

Membership has its priviledge, or membership has its price?

I don’t get the last sentence.

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
March 21, 2015 11:41 am

Ditto but over the years a dozen liberal neighbors bought land and we can’t shoot predators anymore so now there are so many predators (dogs, cats, fox, coyote, racoon, opossum, crow, hawk, eagle, owl, snakes, rats, mice etc) that free range results in zero chickens in a couple days. I had to bury 1X2 inch by 2 ft fence wire all around the hen houses about 4 inches deep to stop the predators that dig. I’ve killed a dozen snakes inside the pens; when they eat eggs or babies, they can’t get back out. Someday the liberals will be begging for food; I’ll sell them some chicks and tell them good luck.

Stucky
Stucky
March 21, 2015 11:47 am

“For the first few years we would buy new chicks via mail order.” —– article

That’s EXACTLY how I found my chick, Ms Freud … via (e)mail order …. found her profile on plentyoffish.com, emailed her a picture of my coq au vin ….. and the rest is history.

El Coyote
El Coyote
March 21, 2015 12:15 pm

1. My buddy Mike and I called the beautiful blonde a free range chicken. She comes close to Charles Dickens’ character Miss Betsy, a chicken that had gone feral.
2. We could buy baby chicks for a nickel in the 60’s. We did so one Sunday morning on our way to grandma’s house. He cheeped up a storm and the old man, who probably had a hangover, said – shut that thing up or I will fling him out the window. We decided it would be a good idea to leave him at granny’s house. He, or another chick like him, grew to a fine fierce rooster. I was saddened when grandma made soup out of him. But when I tasted the soup, ah, then I wished we had more roosters to cook.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
March 21, 2015 12:52 pm

Membership in the family. Or the flock. You want freedom, you pay a price.

flash
flash
March 21, 2015 12:59 pm

HSF, due to your climate and desire for low-maintenance free-range chickens, you might want to look in on an old breed of chicken bred for a sub-zero climate..see here:

Icelandic Chickens: A Heritage Chicken Breed for Modern Homesteads
Try Icelandic chickens, a colorful, self-reliant heritage chicken breed, to enjoy flavorful meat and excellent egg production.

http://www.motherearthnews.com/homesteading-and-livestock/poultry/icelandic-chickens-zm0z14onzkin.aspx

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hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
March 21, 2015 1:16 pm

Nice looking birds, I’ll give them a try.

We’ve been doing our own hatching with broody chickens this past year and we’ve come up with a couple of good runs that appear to be hardier than the original stock, we just can’t get enough of them for replacement purposes yet.

I see that was a Mother Earth News piece, great publication. They put us on their cover a couple of years ago, here’s the article-

http://www.motherearthnews.com/homesteading-and-livestock/living-the-good-life-zm0z12aszkon.aspx

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
March 21, 2015 3:08 pm

We’ve been getting eggs from our neighbors recently and I’m amazed at the variety of colors. White, gray, brown, blue and green. My wife bought a dozen eggs from the store last night and she commented this morning on how it was like they were filled with water compared the the neighbors eggs. I think I’m going to work a deal with the neighbor to cover part of his costs in return for eggs.

I’d like to keep chickens or ducks myself but my two dogs kill birds and I’m afraid they will stress them so much it might affect their health. I’ve never seen my dogs catch a bird yet but I do see the carnage when they do.

Sonic
Sonic
March 21, 2015 3:27 pm

Some sage words for the modern world: “you want freedom; you pay a price”. Too bad that if you don’t want freedom you gotta pay that way too. Which costs more? I’m trying to figure that one out every day.

Bea Lever
Bea Lever
March 21, 2015 4:24 pm

Flash- Those are some mighty fine looking pullets…….just right for some chicken and dumplings. Boston Bob and I would definitely need that cold weather breed to make it through the snow. Chickens are easy and cheap to raise. I have saved that link…thanks.

flash
flash
March 21, 2015 7:38 pm

hardscrabble farmer –Nice looking birds, I’ll give them a try.

good luck finding some for sale…they’ve gotten pretty popular thanks to the ME article..

Bea Lever -Chickens are easy and cheap to raise. I have saved that link…thanks

Penned maybe, but then you have the cost of feed which can only be offset by selling some eggs…if you can….most people I know just give them away..Then there is free range which saves on feed , but the aggravation wrought by chickens tearing up everything you plant and then shitting on everything you build or store outside is anything but easy, in particular on your last damn nerve.

And then too, chickens have to be fed and watered everyday if you keep them penned and if you let them free range, which is what I do , then you have either to be at home , or have a reliable person available at dusk to lock the chicken coop up when the birds go to roost or predators – both feral and tame – will kill every bird in the coop.

Also , chickens will lay out in about three years, so unless you want pets chicken laying no eggs on welfare, you’ll need to rotate your stock however you see fit. Hint , yard chickens that have been running free for two years have will be some tough birds. literally. If you decide to eat them , get a pressure cooker.

Stucky
Stucky
March 21, 2015 7:59 pm

Krist Almighty … a dozen posts about damned chickens!!

If any of you curfuks EVER accuse me of posting fluff, ever again, I will personally come to your place of abode and rip you a new asshole.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
March 21, 2015 9:12 pm

Stucky dasn’t like chickens?

They may not mean a lot to you, but they are a part of my economic life. And taste great, too.

BTW, first post on a new computer (rebuild, but new to me)

Stucky
Stucky
March 21, 2015 9:48 pm

I das like chickun!! Nice fluffy chickuns make good eatin’ and nice fluffy posts.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
March 21, 2015 10:32 pm

I predict MANY more Americans will be raising chickens in the future due to food shortages. I’d love to be at one of the first HOA meetings where this is debated!

KaD
KaD
March 22, 2015 12:03 am

My brother taught his chickens to come when called. His wife would go out and in a high pitched voice say “Chickens! Chickens!” and they would come out of the woods and she would feed them a treat. If I hadn’t seen it myself I wouldn’t have believed it.

Lynn
Lynn
March 23, 2015 1:19 pm

I’ve had both meat and layer chickens for almost 30 years now. I’ve tried a few of the Mediterranean chicken breeds but don’t much care for them — they’re generally smaller and more hyper. They also don’t do as well in cold climates. ‘m in Zone 6/7 and prefer the heavy breeds because they’re hardier and more laid back. I like the Australorps, Orpingtons, Rocks, and Sussex the best. If having frostbite problems with the combs, stick with the birds that have rose or pea combs — and keep the birds inside with a bit of supplementary light to prevent frostbite and keep egg production up.

TE
TE
March 23, 2015 1:50 pm

“Business” friendly, former CEO, governor Rick Snyder, signed a bill outlawing chicken (or other) raising in most cities. Even if you possess a decent amount of land.

A century old, family-owned, turkey farm is currently fighting for its life. Apparently, the new subdivision of McMansions, that popped up downwind from said farm, has friends in high places. I pray for the family’s survival.

I learn a lot from you Hardscrabble, thank you.

And do you think honey could be substituted for the maple? Both are pure sources of life.