When an ordinance is created or made more restrictive than it previously was they almost always have to have a grandfather clause. An exception would be something immediately dangerous to life, like banning wells if the groundwater is contaminated, I think. so even if they have an ordinance you should be grandfathered in since your family has such a long history of property use...can you find photos from several generations that show the chickens or the chicken coop? If it is the same one that has been in use, maybe you can have it named to the historical register of buildings under a new category: chicken homes!
I am so aggravated at how our rights to have unmanipulated food are being whittled away, let alone the right to keep a few chickens for pets. My chicken coop is right right next to my porch. It does not stink and if it did I would notice it before even my closest neighbor. It is 10 feet away from me as I type this!
My chickens have their grown up voices now. They make less noise than the neighborhood dogs, the screeching blackbirds and bluejays, and even the hawk calls are louder. They make such a gentle sound as they go about their business of keeping my bug population under control. In the summer, I could not previously go into the corner where they live because it was a spider and mosquito haven...the leaf litter harbored all kinds of other bugs, too. Mosquitos carry encephalitis, West Nile, and malaria (which is making a comeback here in the south), and I have had a bad mosquito problem in this yard since I bought the house--the chickens are either eating them or disturbing the places where they hatched, because I have far fewer mosquitoes than before, and none in their run/coop area which had been the worst spot in the yard. I have seen the chickens gobble up carpenter ants and their eggs. They are protecting my home from wood eating bugs.
It is inconceivable to imagine there is a way to control avian diseases as there are far more wild birds that range widely than there are domestic chickens, and the chickens are confined to my backyard, so prohibiting chickens out of a fear of hosting an avian disease is utter nonsense.
I have two dogs and if I dont scoop their waste each week, the yard smells and becomes a minefield of piles of poo because even with rain it does not mix into soil quickly. The chicken poo from three chickens in one week is probably near the quantity of one day of poo from the medium and large dog. The dog waste is good for nothing. I can compost the chicken waste and use it for the plants on my property.
I really cannot understand what is wrong with people who freak out at the sight of a clutch of chickens and feel the need to control what their neighbors do on their own property when it in no way causes any harm to them! I cant imagine what is gained by prohibiting chickens from the average backyard: who would rather use poison than a natural pest control that also provides a delicious and healthy food? Watching the chickens is also a great stress relief and can even make me laugh out loud...they are good for my mental health! Therefore, taking them away would indeed cause me direct harm and even could affect my long term health due to higher stress. Healthy life, food liberty, and the pursuit of happiness? Chickens!
I'm not a rooster, but I reserve the right to crow! 1 husband who wants a rooster and will not get it, one son who flew the coop, one lovely german shepherd, one amazing adopted farm dog, three gold sex links, two who hit 17 weeks old the first week of July and laid first eggs 7-15-12!!
I'm not a rooster, but I reserve the right to crow! 1 husband who wants a rooster and will not get it, one son who flew the coop, one lovely german shepherd, one amazing adopted farm dog, three gold sex links, two who hit 17 weeks old the first week of July and laid first eggs 7-15-12!!