How to manage 3 birds

Alyssa Bates

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Hello there!
I have been researching Australorp chickens in preparation for starting our own flock this spring. Our city only allows up to 3 chickens. The more I learn about chicken behavior, life cycles and care, the more I'm coming to realize that 3 is a fairly difficult number to work with, especially since we want to keep them for eggs and would like to let them die naturally and add new chickens to the flock to maintain a number of 3 ongoing.
Since we want chickens that are calm and easily handled, everyone tells me to always start with chicks and raise them. Chicks are available at our nearby feed store each spring, but not any other time of the year.
Everyone also tells me I should purchase three chicks right at the start for various reasons (three will be happier, and if unfortunately one chicken doesn't make it there are still two to keep each other happy until we can get another bird). But I'm seeing so many snags I could run into along the way. Here are my major questions...
1) Even with the best care possible, one day, one of the chickens will die from old age. To replace that one, and keep my overall number of chickens up to 3, I'll need to purchase a new chick in the spring. Can you actually raise a chick in isolation, and then introduce it to the other two once it is old enough?
2) If you can't raise a chick in isolation, what is my solution? Wait until after two chickens pass away, and then raise two new chicks to add to the third? But then the 3rd will be stressed out until the other two are added... right?
Does anyone else have experience managing flocks of 3? If so, how do you handle it?
 
Yes, limiting it to three makes life very difficult for you! You shouldn't bring up a chick in isolation and introducing one to an established flock, even if it's only a flock of two, would be very hard on the young one. You could rehome your older ones if you do lose one, but they do become pets. I'm sorry the rules are making such an enjoyable hobby difficult!
 
Most town ordinances seem to allow about 6 hens/no roosters, which seems more reasonable. Usually also allow immature offspring to be excluded from the count. Maybe you could gather your chicken owning neighbors[or sympathetic ones] to change the regs? :D
 

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