I live on a five-acre ranch and have always owned a few
horses and dogs. Last year I decided it would be a learning experience for my
husband and me if we bought a few chickens that could lay eggs. No more eating store
bought eggs! “Ranch wives have chicken coops and gather their own eggs,” I told
Greg and promised that not over a dozen or so would be bought. But alas, the
baby chicks were incredibly cute, and before I knew it there were forty-nine
total; chicks that quickly grew into two roosters and forty-seven hens. The
chicken lady told me my chicks were ALL female. She obviously guessed wrong.
Greg quickly converted one of the three stalls in our barn
into a chicken coop, complete with laying boxes, perches, plenty of straw…and
endless chicken poop. In fact, birds have no problem pooping everywhere,
including their five-gallon water bucket. Ugh!
I’m happy to announce today that it has indeed been a
worthwhile venture. How else would I have learned about roosters killing other
roosters, dogs chasing and killing chickens for sport, hungry vicious coyotes
and fox, that skunks and mink can dig under your barn into a coop and tear your
hens to pieces, that snakes favorite meals are baby chicks, that chickens can
drown in a horse trough, that red lights are needed in the winter to keep
chickens warm AND from eating their own eggs, and last but not least, that chickens
can just plain disappear and no one other than God himself knows where they’ve
gone?
When spring finally came, I proudly announced to the same chicken
lady when I was buying more chicks…that I counted myself lucky to have fourteen
hens left and one cocky rooster named, Herman. (Herman murdered George one day
when I was out hunting rocks.)
Here were my choices when I realized that Herman was a crazy
unpredictable Casanova in the hen house, and that he could no longer live among
my egg layers. His first and only love was to chase those hens and…cock-a-doodle-do…you
get the picture. What a pain! He could both lose his head and end up in my stew
pot. Keep in mind I had no idea who would have butchered him; it wouldn’t have
me. In a crisis situation I might get through the plucking and gutting part,
but not the killing (I named every chicken). Or Herman could fend for himself
in the open. I turned him out of the hen house to roam to his heart’s content,
knowing that by doing so, he would probably get carried off in the dead of
night and eaten.
What breed of chicken is Herman? He is quite a looker. We have a modest 2 1/2 acres and one of the hobbies my husband has recently picked up is being a chicken farmer! Herman has beautiful markings and it sounds like he is friendly?
ReplyDeleteYou make me laugh, Becca.
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