- Feb 14, 2011
- 6
- 0
- 7
Hello everyone!
So... I'm new. I had chickens as a small child, but only remember that I really loved the chickens. Having remembered that I love chickens (ok... so it took 25 years... I'm blond, what can I say?), I really want to have chickens again. So I've been scouring the internet, and I've discovered BYC.com. Goodness how I adore you guys! I no longer feel as if I've lost my mind, though my family all seems to be of that exact opinion.
Some important facts - I have dogs, I have cats, I have small children that visit me at least twice a year, and usually more as my house is *the* place to be for holidays and celebrations... I cook. LOL. My property is about 3/4s of an acre in Talbott Tn. I'd like to start with maybe 4 or 6 chickens, and I'm really interested in some of the colored leghorns, hens only.
I realize that I can not free range the chickens, as I'm dead positive that at least one dog and one cat would think I had brought them dinner on the hoof, so to speak (and the cat would expect me to cook it), but I would like to be able to utilize the chickens for bug control in the yard, thus the chicken tractor idea has really gotten a hold of me. I've been researching the dickens out of it, and I just like the whole idea, it just seems like me AND the chickens win, and being a rescuer down to my very soul, I like it when the animals win!
So I've decided to go the tractor route, which of course leads me to a million and one questions which I could really use an opinion on for anyone that wants to share!
1. The chickens will have to be in the tractor year round, so I know that I have to build accommodation for them that will protect them from wind, cold, and rain... but I was considering having the nesting boxes be the kind that are outside the coop area, so I could get to them without having to enter the tractor. Will these types of boxes be warm enough in the winter or will the hens avoid them for the warmer coop area?
2. I do not even want to admit the number of chicken tractors I've looked at, but lets say its enough to have a favorite category. That favorite would be the type that has the "convertable top", where the pen area can be covered and uncovered according to weather conditions, allowing for warmth air and sunshine while still protecting from rain snow and wind. I've seen this done with tarps, but I have YARDS and YARDS of boating canvas (a lovely dark purple boating canvas at that), is there any reason that anyone is aware of that I could not use this instead of tarps?
3. Our yard was seriously neglected before we moved in, and I have slowly but surely been trying to bring it back to something that one might want to look at and maybe even walk on, and I know that chickens can help in this venture, so I would like to leave the chickens in place long enough to really work the soil, but not so long that the chickens health is being sacrificed to the lawn. What should I look for in deciding when both the lawn and the chickens are getting the most out of the arrangement?
I'm going to stop here, though I could go on for hours I think, and just say an early thank you! to anyone that responds.... Thank you!
Char
So... I'm new. I had chickens as a small child, but only remember that I really loved the chickens. Having remembered that I love chickens (ok... so it took 25 years... I'm blond, what can I say?), I really want to have chickens again. So I've been scouring the internet, and I've discovered BYC.com. Goodness how I adore you guys! I no longer feel as if I've lost my mind, though my family all seems to be of that exact opinion.
Some important facts - I have dogs, I have cats, I have small children that visit me at least twice a year, and usually more as my house is *the* place to be for holidays and celebrations... I cook. LOL. My property is about 3/4s of an acre in Talbott Tn. I'd like to start with maybe 4 or 6 chickens, and I'm really interested in some of the colored leghorns, hens only.
I realize that I can not free range the chickens, as I'm dead positive that at least one dog and one cat would think I had brought them dinner on the hoof, so to speak (and the cat would expect me to cook it), but I would like to be able to utilize the chickens for bug control in the yard, thus the chicken tractor idea has really gotten a hold of me. I've been researching the dickens out of it, and I just like the whole idea, it just seems like me AND the chickens win, and being a rescuer down to my very soul, I like it when the animals win!
So I've decided to go the tractor route, which of course leads me to a million and one questions which I could really use an opinion on for anyone that wants to share!
1. The chickens will have to be in the tractor year round, so I know that I have to build accommodation for them that will protect them from wind, cold, and rain... but I was considering having the nesting boxes be the kind that are outside the coop area, so I could get to them without having to enter the tractor. Will these types of boxes be warm enough in the winter or will the hens avoid them for the warmer coop area?
2. I do not even want to admit the number of chicken tractors I've looked at, but lets say its enough to have a favorite category. That favorite would be the type that has the "convertable top", where the pen area can be covered and uncovered according to weather conditions, allowing for warmth air and sunshine while still protecting from rain snow and wind. I've seen this done with tarps, but I have YARDS and YARDS of boating canvas (a lovely dark purple boating canvas at that), is there any reason that anyone is aware of that I could not use this instead of tarps?
3. Our yard was seriously neglected before we moved in, and I have slowly but surely been trying to bring it back to something that one might want to look at and maybe even walk on, and I know that chickens can help in this venture, so I would like to leave the chickens in place long enough to really work the soil, but not so long that the chickens health is being sacrificed to the lawn. What should I look for in deciding when both the lawn and the chickens are getting the most out of the arrangement?
I'm going to stop here, though I could go on for hours I think, and just say an early thank you! to anyone that responds.... Thank you!
Char