If this is your first time space is your biggest limiter. If you have enough space, then that increases your chance of predators. In my experience, the coop and run don't have to be fancy, but they do have to be totally enclosed in both chicken wire and in heavy duty wire. One to keep chicks in, and one to keep everything else out. EVERYTHING likes to eat chickens.
If you have kids, I would suggest several different breeds, it makes it easier to tell them apart, give them a name, recognize their individuality, which makes it fun. Plus it allows you to try different breeds, cause you will find, you will like some breeds better than others. Better to have a few of each, rather than a whole flock of one kind that you really don't like.
If your younger children are under 5, I would STRONGLY recommend that you don't get a rooster at first. Children being attacked by a mean rooster, really destroys the fun of chickens for them. Many kids in the past have hated chickens for the rest of their lives after an attack, and you are risking serious face scares or their eyes. If you research, you will find countless posts on how their wonderful rooster went to a demon in a day. After a year or so, when you have some more chicken experience, you can take on a rooster. You will have developed an innate sense of your birds, and a better understanding of chicken dynamics that really only experience can give you.
While it is fun to hatch out your own eggs, it is really just as fun to hatch out someone else's eggs, if you have a hen go broody, or get some day old chicks at the feed store and slip under her. There is nothing as sweet as a hen and chicks.
If you want year round eggs, you need to have a multi age flock. Pullets, or first year chickens will lay pretty steadily through out the short days of winter. However, they do have a bit smaller eggs. Older chickens lay bigger eggs, but as they age, especially as they molt, their egg production slows. By adding a few chicks each year, and taking a few out of the flock each year, you can have a fairly constant egg source.
I have had an ongoing flock for the last 6 years, and at different times before that. I have enjoyed this hobby tremendously, hopefully this advice can help you through some of the pitfalls of my experience.
MrsK
If you have kids, I would suggest several different breeds, it makes it easier to tell them apart, give them a name, recognize their individuality, which makes it fun. Plus it allows you to try different breeds, cause you will find, you will like some breeds better than others. Better to have a few of each, rather than a whole flock of one kind that you really don't like.
If your younger children are under 5, I would STRONGLY recommend that you don't get a rooster at first. Children being attacked by a mean rooster, really destroys the fun of chickens for them. Many kids in the past have hated chickens for the rest of their lives after an attack, and you are risking serious face scares or their eyes. If you research, you will find countless posts on how their wonderful rooster went to a demon in a day. After a year or so, when you have some more chicken experience, you can take on a rooster. You will have developed an innate sense of your birds, and a better understanding of chicken dynamics that really only experience can give you.
While it is fun to hatch out your own eggs, it is really just as fun to hatch out someone else's eggs, if you have a hen go broody, or get some day old chicks at the feed store and slip under her. There is nothing as sweet as a hen and chicks.
If you want year round eggs, you need to have a multi age flock. Pullets, or first year chickens will lay pretty steadily through out the short days of winter. However, they do have a bit smaller eggs. Older chickens lay bigger eggs, but as they age, especially as they molt, their egg production slows. By adding a few chicks each year, and taking a few out of the flock each year, you can have a fairly constant egg source.
I have had an ongoing flock for the last 6 years, and at different times before that. I have enjoyed this hobby tremendously, hopefully this advice can help you through some of the pitfalls of my experience.
MrsK
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