illinois towns that allow backyard chickens

September meeting. Ordinance includes 6 hens, Coop 5 ft from property line, 25 ft from neighbors house, no roosters and $25 yearly fee and only allowed on single family homes. Ordinance to be voted in at the October meeting. Getting there. Getting very anxious.
 
Hi I'm from the outside of Kankakee but still in a subdivision and I have 16 chickens 2 rabbits and 5 ducks and I never asked anybody before I got them I just moved them from my farm to the house and nobody said anything the neighbors love them and like getting eggs they say that as long as u can control their area then they are fine but I guess it all realise on your neighbors
 
September meeting. Ordinance includes 6 hens, Coop 5 ft from property line, 25 ft from neighbors house, no roosters and $25 yearly fee and only allowed on single family homes. Ordinance to be voted in at the October meeting. Getting there. Getting very anxious.
Glad to hear you're making progress.
 
Hi I'm from the outside of Kankakee but still in a subdivision and I have 16 chickens 2 rabbits and 5 ducks and I never asked anybody before I got them I just moved them from my farm to the house and nobody said anything the neighbors love them and like getting eggs they say that as long as u can control their area then they are fine but I guess it all realise on your neighbors
Our neighbors are great too. Back when we started, there was a lot of grey area. The answer of legality all depended on which clerk you asked & how they interpreted the wording. Realistically, if no one complains; no one will bother knocking on your door.

We simply asked the neighbors if they minded hens & a possible roo Sharing surplus eggs goes a long way for keeping neighbors happy! We even have a couple roos right now. Trying to decide which to keep. I put them in the garage at night so no one can hear them until 8am when I let them out.
 
I have a silver duckwing rooster and I just put a collar on him so no issues can be formed out of it but otherwise he is fine in the neighbor hood
 
I have a silver duckwing rooster and I just put a collar on him so no issues can be formed out of it but otherwise he is fine in the neighbor hood
i made some collars too. The success of them depends on the roo. One roo needs to wear it (& it helps A LOT), one roo has a softer low-pitched crow, and the 3rd doesn't crow (only 3xs). I don't bother putting collars on 2 of them since their sounds don't carry.

Make sure you check the neck frequently & adjust as needed. One of my roos, the collar just didn't work. (Made his crow higher-pitched & longer.) In order to get any type of reduction, it had to be very tight. It caused major skin irritation & was a choking hazard. It didn't help that he loved to crow. He was fine around kids, but over-mated the hens. That big guy tolerated my daughter playing dress up & even came along when I taught in the local schools. At 1.5 yrs old, he was as sweet as ever. Although my neighbors liked him, I knew it was best to rehome him before a random dog-walker or jogger decided to make trouble. I'll probably never have another roo like him.

Our second roo was very quiet. 3-4 crows in the morning and done. If I ever heard him crowing during the day, it was because of a threat like hawk - or power tools. I only used the crow collar when a neighbor had a party, building project, etc. He was also terrific with the hens. Sadly, he was aggressive towards strangers & kids, so he had to go. That's why I have 3 roos now. We're at 5mo, so those horomones should kick in soon. I want to know who might be aggressive before choosing a keeper.
 
This is my setup in the town
small but it works for bantams anything bigger I bring to the farm but my rooster is cool with everything the neighbors like to play with him and has got the name Reggie
 

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