Keeping Chickens Free Range

Wow. My hat's off to you. That's about the deepest expert description I've ever heard in the chicken realm.

At the same time, I feel compelled to say, "Kids, don't try this at home!" Learning how to notice and interpret all these signs is valuable to any poultrykeeper, but it must have taken you a while to have picked all this up!

You're right about the grain being the first thing exhausted on range. Back in the old days they did a lot of research on this. First, calories are depleted, then (probably) protein, followed by vitamins in the form of palatable green forage. So the first thing to supplement is calories, usually in the form of grain. (Plus calcium except on calcium-rich soils.)

Robert


For most I would also say do not do this at home as acreage and predator management requirements exceeds the typical backyard capacity. Still some useful information providing understanding.

I have been seriously into chickens since the 1970's. Also generally had multiple flocks at multiple locations at any given time. Most of the flocks were based on game chickens / fighting chickens occasionally with some sort of pseudo-production breed (i.e. White Plymouth Rock, Barred Plymouth Rock, and Rhode Island Reds) included as hens. The games where generally organized as harems on what we called walks. The walks where usually established in barnyard settings where all we wanted to keep was stags / cockerels hatched before June 1 and the brood cock. The males where generally harvested about this time of year. The balance where then consumed by us or owner of the barnyard. The flocks were not fed directly and many were not in the company of any livestock that where fed. We also had walks that were basically doing all their business well away from any buildings and where alone fence rows. Roosting, nesting and chick rearing was all in those fence rows in a near feral state. We had some walks that had birds year round and they generally had more hens and younger stags to overwinter on. It was those that provided some really interesting observations. One walk then was based at home one of the hens liked nest in my bedroom as window was always open allowing for really close observations of broody behavior. Hen brooding clutch within a couple feet of your head makes for interesting sounds at night. When younger my observations not based on science.

These days I manage for at times as many as 4 discrete flocks on 6 acres of my own 18 acres with some of the flocks very much foraging much larger areas off my property. Neighbors were consulted first. One of the flocks has been based around the house and actually roosted on the front porch within a few feet of my bedroom window. I am now a trained animal scientist with a strong nutritional background. When I get days off they are often used to study the free-ranging flocks. On multiple occasions I have set an alarm to go of at 15-minute intervals around the clock to go out and see where the birds where and what they were doing. Season, weather, wind direction, time of day, content of feeding station, were just some of the factors that influenced ranging habits. I have also resorted to making so roosts very easy for me to walk up to each night so I can rapidly count birds and access from feel to estimate fullness. Birds also tolerate touching breast well but that is slower and in my setting it is not a very sensitive measure of nutritional status.

This stuff is down right fun to watch!
 
Walks are total free-range sites, no confinement. Birds define their own ranges according to their needs. Smallest I saw might encompass about four acres while others might work areas exceeding 20 acres. Smaller associated with animal feed lots based on horses, cattle or hogs. Larger extreme associated with overgrazed horse and cattle pastures where chickens worked narrow strips around fence defining field perimeter. Latter pattern would not hold it fence row kept too clean of vegetation. Then birds would stay near outbuildings as cover.
 
Walks are total free-range sites, no confinement. Birds define their own ranges according to their needs. Smallest I saw might encompass about four acres while others might work areas exceeding 20 acres. Smaller associated with animal feed lots based on horses, cattle or hogs. Larger extreme associated with overgrazed horse and cattle pastures where chickens worked narrow strips around fence defining field perimeter. Latter pattern would not hold it fence row kept too clean of vegetation. Then birds would stay near outbuildings as cover.

So these gamebird cocks and their harems never cross into each other's territories on these free ranged sites? No mixing at all? Total separation of all flocks on separate ranges at all times? That's an amazing concept....usually fighting and gamebird cocks are kept on leashes or widely separated pens so they won't kill one another. I've never heard of chickens voluntarily maintaining separate flocks on individual territory without having to have fences to keep them away from one another. Did this require some training of some sort? Did each flock have coops or roosts in their section?
 
Walks are almost always in rural settings where residences were at least 1/2 mile apart. Most walks we maintained (ranged usually 10 to 20 walks) in a given year were spread over a whole county so in reality often miles apart. Some were closer but generally not close enough even when young birds attempted to disperse like some do. Rule was no adult male chickens that were not ours on a walk. Sites selected were not near pre-existing flocks. So no mixing for purposes of genetic integrity for sure.

Use of pens and tie-cords are for cockyards. We had two, no I have but one. Those issues not generally relevant to walk settings.


I can maintain discrete flocks when it comes to territory. That requires edges like fences or creeks to delineate boundaries. The fences do not obstruct chicken movements. I can keep harems led by a game in one an American Dominique in another where territory boundary is shared. Would not work with two games. Dynamics of those interactions complex and covered elsewhere. When multiple games involved in a larger and more complex barnyard setting, territory boundaries need to be so they are at least 100 feet apart and ideally with view obstructed.

A lack of training is more important, ideally chickens do not come running when feed bucket brought out. If they do come running and you cross territory boundaries with chickens in tow, you could have a battle royal. To get around this feeders were armed well before sun up. Many of my chickens are very much trained but only to come to a particular signal and otherwise they ignore me.

Roosts discrete. Even now I have four discrete roosting areas. Birds from a given roost do not mingle with those from another roost. You can deviate from this with sub-flocks made up of juveniles that have discrete roosts but otherwise have overlapping home ranges.

All kinds of options open up when chickens, especially on the male side are not games.
 
All of that would take an incredible amount of land! And you went to each of these plots of land each night to assess crop loads and nutritional status of these birds? That's true dedication....and a lot of time and land involved. Must be a pretty lucrative concern to warrant all that land and time spent.

I can't imagine the typical backyard flock owner has that much land and time in order to be able to scatter ranging sites that far apart and be able to assess the nutritional status of these separate ranges.
 
All of that would take an incredible amount of land! And you went to each of these plots of land each night to assess crop loads and nutritional status of these birds? That's true dedication....and a lot of time and land involved. Must be a pretty lucrative concern to warrant all that land and time spent.

I can't imagine the typical backyard flock owner has that much land and time in order to be able to scatter ranging sites that far apart and be able to assess the nutritional status of these separate ranges.
Nope definitely dont have time for all of that.

but, I free range my birds, but we have a few acres, and live in a tropical type climate, where hay-grass grows on our property, and we have WAY too many bugs. Our adult flock lives with our goats, and our goats and chickens can't even keep the weeds/foliage under control together.



This is our goat pen, we have 3 adult female goats in there, along with our adult flock. We'll be adding more birds in the future.... but even with the dirt area they've cleared for dust bathing, we get 3 feet tall grass that has to be mowed in there! LOL
 
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All of that would take an incredible amount of land!  And you went to each of these plots of land each night to assess crop loads and nutritional status of these birds?  That's true dedication....and a lot of time and land involved.  Must be a pretty lucrative concern to warrant all that land and time spent. 

I can't imagine the typical backyard flock owner has that much land and time in order to be able to scatter ranging sites that far apart and be able to assess the nutritional status of these separate ranges. 



The detailed observations on crop fill are more recent and ongoing. Even now I do not check birds each night, just periodically as part of responsible care giving regimen. Ranging habits most of time is a weekend thing and sometimes involves input from neighbors. Area where current observations occur is on 6 acres with route taken to visit roost only about 250 yards that goes in a loop. Barn farthest point 100 yards from house.

Early on with walks, most land not ours. We had several hundred acres but walk locations were centered on occupied dwellings where structure (buildings / fences / ponds) and dogs were present. Birds were checked when stocked out, maybe once a month when talking with land owner, and again with physical capture in early fall. We paid 5 to 10 to sometimes 25 dollars per bird harvested. There is a lot more to this than related here. It was a venture that was economically viable during times of different legal conditions and where farms where much more diversified and free-range flocks were more significant resources than they are today.

To do the game fowl side and be successful, it helped a great deal to be "well healed" which is a term derived from the chicken fighting lexicon. The process was expensive with most invested in the cockyard side. We even had some one employed specifically to care for games in cockyard and he did gardening as well.

The methods and know how that went with walks are a wealth of information that can be used to guide keepers of free-range poultry, regardless of breed. We thought enough of the process to involve vet care of chickens long before the recent round of "old timers" dictated such was a waste of time for pet chickens.
 
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To do the game fowl side and be successful, it helped a great deal to be "well healed" which is a term derived from the chicken fighting lexicon. The process was expensive with most invested in the cockyard side. We even had some one employed specifically to care for games in cockyard and he did gardening as well.

The methods and know how that went with walks are a wealth of information that can be used to guide keepers of free-range poultry, regardless of breed. We thought enough of the process to involve vet care of chickens long before the recent round of "old timers" dictated such was a waste of time for pet chickens.

I'll venture to say that a commercial cockfighting operation has more of an investment in their birds than the typical "old timer" with a plain ol' farm bird, so vetting would likely be less of a loss in the operation cost of a commercial cockfighting farm than it would in a typical pet or farm flock scenario. Not so much as a lack of caring for the birds, but more of a bottom line prospect. Not to mention birds used in cockfighting will incur more wounds requiring vetting than would a typical farmyard chicken.
 

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