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Gardening with chickens (and other poultry) - Page 6

post #51 of 146
Quote:
Originally Posted by VkyVky View Post

Is this where I can ask about composting chicken manure with Thoroughbed wood chips? I put some in an old plastic trash barrel about 3-4 months ago. Added some water now and again. When and how can I use it? I am growing some green beans (just sprouted) and probably a tomato plant this Spring/Summer. Thanks.



If it is still pretty solid (large pieces of woodchips)  You can use it as a mulch on top of your beds once the plants have come up.  The nutrients in the shavings/poop will be washed down into the soil whenever it rains or you water.  If it is decomposing and in small chuncks you can mix it into your soil, or if fully decomposed and all fine and crumbly lay it on beds and plant seeds directly into it.  Really you can use it however you like!  Chicken poo is amazing that way lol.

post #52 of 146


 

Quote:
Originally Posted by hennyfarm22 View Post

I like the idea of using them in the garden, but in the past when I let them free range they often eat up or peck at my tomatoes.    I'm thinking about making a smaller wire tractor to go between the rowsand put them in for a short period of time.. that may be worth a try.

 

 

I have had the same problem with both my tomatoes and strawberries in the past.  I have had lots of sucess using poultry netting/ chicken wire/ hardware cloth and some stakes.  I just attach the netting material about 3 inches off the ground to some stakes placed a few inches away from the bed.  This lets the chickens at the bottom of the bed to snack up on any slugs but keeps them far enough away from the ripening fruit.  Or the tractor method works just as well too!
 

 

post #53 of 146

SkySchazade, thanks for the info!

Married to a wonderful husband, mother to five children, owner of three cats and my 5 chicks arrived 6/2/2011. 2 Easter Eggers, 1 Delaware, 1 Wellsummer and 1 Buff Orpington. 1 Australian Labradoodle.
"Let no debt remain outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one another, for whoever loves others has fulfilled the law. - Romans 13:8

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Married to a wonderful husband, mother to five children, owner of three cats and my 5 chicks arrived 6/2/2011. 2 Easter Eggers, 1 Delaware, 1 Wellsummer and 1 Buff Orpington. 1 Australian Labradoodle.
"Let no debt remain outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one another, for whoever loves others has fulfilled the law. - Romans 13:8

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post #54 of 146
Quote:
Originally Posted by VkyVky View Post

SkySchazade, thanks for the info!



Your very Welcome!  Threads like these make my inner farm nerd rejoice!    ya.gif  I could seriously talk about this stuff all day, much to my hubbys dismay lol.

post #55 of 146

Way to go, Sky.  I had some little flying bugs living in my Chicken manure/compost pile.  I turned the chicken on it and they turned the pile, ate the bugs, and gave me the most beautiful compost I have ever seen.  I loaded it into old feed sacks and saved it for my garden.  I will have more that I can use.  I am a little unsure how "hot" it is and would like to test it, maybe a ph?, too.  Anyway, I luv this thread.  I was switching to the easy garden for this info.  I'm not ready to turn the chickens out in my tiny garden, but I will fence in my compost area(off their run) and let them scratch their little hearts out!yesss.gif

post #56 of 146
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by laughingdog52 View Post

 I'm not ready to turn the chickens out in my tiny garden, 


I think that's the key to all gardening with chickens.  When I tell some people about trying to use chickens in the garden, their response is, "but they'll tear your garden up".  No one can completely turn their chickens loose in a veggie garden all the time.  The idea is to use them as tillers, compost turners, etc., while limiting their access to plants they will damage or eat.

 

Owner of: 1 Great Dane, 1 Yellow Lab, 2 house cats, 4 barn cats, 4 horses, 2 calves, 21 chickens, and 1 very patient husband 

 

By day we are both family nurse practitioners.  By night we run Nutwood Farms in NE Ohio, a small hobby farm and horse boarding facility.

 

Expecting our first, long-awaited child in December 2012!!!!!  

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Owner of: 1 Great Dane, 1 Yellow Lab, 2 house cats, 4 barn cats, 4 horses, 2 calves, 21 chickens, and 1 very patient husband 

 

By day we are both family nurse practitioners.  By night we run Nutwood Farms in NE Ohio, a small hobby farm and horse boarding facility.

 

Expecting our first, long-awaited child in December 2012!!!!!  

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post #57 of 146


Woooohooo, way to use your chickens wisely!  clap.gif  If you are worried about how "hot" it is mix it into the soil around plants instead of planting directly into it.  If you ever have too much,  send it my way, I never seem to have enough! gig.gif

 

 

 

Quote:
Originally Posted by laughingdog52 View Post

Way to go, Sky.  I had some little flying bugs living in my Chicken manure/compost pile.  I turned the chicken on it and they turned the pile, ate the bugs, and gave me the most beautiful compost I have ever seen.  I loaded it into old feed sacks and saved it for my garden.  I will have more that I can use.  I am a little unsure how "hot" it is and would like to test it, maybe a ph?, too.  Anyway, I luv this thread.  I was switching to the easy garden for this info.  I'm not ready to turn the chickens out in my tiny garden, but I will fence in my compost area(off their run) and let them scratch their little hearts out!yesss.gif



 

post #58 of 146

Thanks, that's also worth a try.  love this site and eveyone's ideas.wee.gif

post #59 of 146

I did Skye's idea last year and it works great.  I till the garden, let the chickens in for a week, till the garden again, let them in for another week (someone actually asked me if I raked it out afterward it looks so nice). They get in there and work all the clumps out and eat all of last years weeds seeds as well as grubs.  I don't fence my chickens, they freerange - I fence my garden cool.png.  Then after planting, I let the plants get to a decent size before letting the chickens back in.  And I use bird netting, like they use on fruit trees, on anything I don't want pecked.

Happy chickens lay happy eggs!

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Happy chickens lay happy eggs!

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post #60 of 146
Quote:
Originally Posted by Panth View Post

I did Skye's idea last year and it works great.  I till the garden, let the chickens in for a week, till the garden again, let them in for another week (someone actually asked me if I raked it out afterward it looks so nice). They get in there and work all the clumps out and eat all of last years weeds seeds as well as grubs.  I don't fence my chickens, they freerange - I fence my garden cool.png.  Then after planting, I let the plants get to a decent size before letting the chickens back in.  And I use bird netting, like they use on fruit trees, on anything I don't want pecked.




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