"Backyard Chicken Movement Grows", AOL news

Oblio13

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Jan 26, 2008
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NATION
Backyard Chicken Movement Grows


Dave Thier
Contributor
(Jan. 28) -- In a recent Atlantic article, reporter Sarah Elton's key source took weeks of convincing to come clean. She was terrified of what would happen if her illegal activities were discovered. She only agreed to an interview on the condition of anonymity.

The source, however, was not a government whistle-blower or financial criminal. It was a Canadian woman raising chickens. She is one of many Canadians explicitly violating zoning laws by keeping poultry in city backyards. The Canadian government banned chickens from most municipalities after World War II.

Canadian chicken bandits, as well as groups like CLUCK (Calgary Liberated Urban Chicken Klub), are joining a backyard and urban chicken movement that has been gaining ground in the United States for a few years. They began raising chickens as a simple way of taking control of their own protein, motivated both by the recession and wariness of industrial meat after reading books like "Fast Food Nation" and "The Omnivore's Dilemma."

A woman tends to chickens in her San Francisco yard. More urbanites are raising chickens, a trend that chould reshape the food system.

In many parts of the U.S., backyard farmers have been at odds with zoning laws similar to those found in Canada. City governments have been slowly altering regulations, however, in places like New Haven, Conn., Columbia, S.C., Portland, Maine, and others. In New York City, chickens are considered pets under the health code. Most regulations draw the line at noisy roosters.

The concept of raising chickens seems to have caught on to a particular locavore zeitgeist. In September, The Associated Press reported that chicken raising classes in Portland, Ore., were over-enrolled, and local hatcheries had trouble meeting demand for chicks.

Urban professionals with no agricultural experience may be over-confident in their chicken-raising abilities, however.

"Unwanted urban chickens are showing up at local animal shelters," Kim Severson wrote in The New York Times last year. "Even in the best of circumstances, chickens die at alarming rates."

Still, food activists believe this sort of trend is more than a middle-class diversion; it could also be the beginning of a new way of imagining the American food system.

Will Allen runs an organization that grows produce in a working-class neighborhood in Milwaukee. He believes that the food security of the future will hinge on millions of small producers in cities and elsewhere.

Of course, some just do it for the taste.

"When we cracked them for breakfast," the Atlantic's Elton wrote of her contraband eggs, "the yolk was yellow as a traffic ticket and the taste mellow, creamy, splendid."
Filed under: Nation, World, Only On AOL News
 
Chicken's die at an alarming rate? tell me thier kidding! chickens are aten world wide at alarming rates
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like most pets,if kept in good conditions they will live a long life.
 
I suppose it depends on your definition of "alarming". I lose enough to jokingly call them "disposable pets". I try to start every year with spares.
 
Chickens do not die in alarming rates...that reporter needs to read up on something better, like this site for example!

Ignorance breeds ignorance! Phooey on them!
 
I agree with the chickens showing up in animal shelters
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Sometimes people think Chickens are for them but just like puppy's and kittens Chickens grow out of the chick stage fast.
New owners find themselves overloaded with the now Big Chickens and the feeding and as we all know chickens can be messy and smelly and Roo's are loud.
I know someone who takes in all the unwanted Fowl and either eats them or sells them and he receives more Calls than he can handle from people who become tired of their chickens. (yes he informs them of his intentions)
I myself have had untold numbers of chickens offered to me but i decline due to i use strict bio security in my flock.
Goats,Sheep,donkeys,Rabbits, Ducks, Geese All types of Birds even expensive parrots, find their way to local auctions and shelters.

Now the dieing in alarming numbers I don't know about that most who have the intentions of getting chickens do research how to take care of them.
 
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Animal shelters? How odd. If for some un-fathomable reason I were to decide chickens were not the "pet" for me, I think they would go to the table before going to the pound.
 

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