Okay folks... been back in Japan a week already and hit the ground running. The reason I didn't post much while I was in the US involved a trip to the ER early New Year's Day (not bird related). Fortunately, during the visit stateside, there was time to stop by the local feed store and pick up a few supplies for the coop. Backyard chicken keeping culture here is nowhere as current as in the US, but there is definitely a colorful history.
A popular breed in Japan, for a number of years, was the chabo. Apparently the birds are pretty good at finding their own food so aren't so hard to keep. When I did manage to talk with some local folks about the birds that were around the yards maybe 50 to 60 years ago, people definitely remember them. In fact, eggs and poultry were delicacies until only a generation or two ago. When I asked about how people used to process their birds, they mentioned that it was such a rare occasion that few seemed to remember clearly. My mother-in-law said something that can be translated as, "We would have chicken once a year (for New Year's) or maybe twice, but only when a bird met an untimely death." No one I spoke with seemed to remember how to eviscerate foul; this is where Youtube really comes in helpful.
Now, here we are in 2011, welcoming the start of the year in Miyazaki with the news that the avian or bird flu has just hit the area. We really don't want to have to cull our flock (mainly because processing our 20 or so birds would take up most of the day); though we've got the freezer space, we'd rather have fresh eggs. The price of eggs was already expected to rise. If we do have to start over again, we will be more prepared than we were for our first batch of chicks. My wife just said that over 400,000 (yes, that's close to half a million) birds are being culled. Just checked the online news and, yes, apparently the Ground Self-Defense Force (their army) was even called in to help. We fall just outside the ten mile radius withing which the government is mandating a mandatory cull to contain spread of the virus. We are kind of holding our breath. Either way, we plan on making the best of the situation.
This coming weeking, we should have time to take a few decent photos of our flock to post on this site. Our coops are nothing to brag about, our garden is quite small and hardly beautiful (especially this season), but we sure have grown to enjoy keeping our backyard flock. And we are still learning a lot.