Maybe chickens?

:welcome

Hello, you made me curious about the chicken breed you're looking for so I looked up some info on them. It's going to be pretty difficult to locate any for sale according to this: "They are rare in the United States; however, surprisingly, even fewer of them still exist in their original native home – the United Kingdom – where it is estimated that only 50 individuals are still found."
coronation-sussex-chicken

Thanks for doing an intro! Hope you'll be able to establish a flock of backyard chickens.
 
Glad to meet you, long time member! Congratulations on moving into chicken ownership. I hope your town allows a nice number of chickens.

You have chosen a wonderful breed. I hope you can find the birds you want. You can try your local sources, or the big poultry hatcheries (I have had good results with Meyer Hatchery, but there are others). Or you can keep checking the For Sale pages here at BYC. You can also use the SEARCH BAR here to see others discussing your breed, and find breeders (and just owners) that way.

Here are my favorite beginning articles that helped me as a newbie. It's as close to a comprehensive chicken owner's manual as I have gotten here at BYC. I hope you will find them helpful as well. All articles are short, have illustrations, and reviews, which are often worth looking at for the comments.

1. Intro to chicken keeping

2. Common mistakes & how to fix them

3. Ventilation (important to chicken health), with helpful links to coop designs organized by climate (because what is just right for my New England hens won't work for my brother's Arizona chickens)

3(a). Farmers Almanac on Building Coops (Includes size requirements!) Allowing plenty of space for chickens is really important because, even as chicks, they will start pecking each other or plucking their own feathers, or become unhealthy if they are overcrowded. Here is a link to Colorado State Extension's publication on space and temperature requirements for chicks as they age.

4. Predator protection for new & existing coops

5. Dealing with a muddy coop and run

6. Gardening for chickens

7. BYC Lists of Chicken Ailments and Cures

To look for articles on your own:

A. Use the SEARCH button, but use the Advanced Search choice, and select ARTICLES at the top of the box. Just enter your keyword(s) and scroll through your results!

B. I find it helpful to notice the rating and reviews. All articles are by BYC members, and all the reviews/ratings are as well. The ratings help a newbie like me sort the most useful and reliable articles.

C. You can bookmark the articles or posts you think you want to refer to again using that bookmark icon at the top of articles or posts. You can find them again by clicking on your own avatar and looking at the list of bookmarks you have built up!

Notes about where to put a coop:

1. As far as you can, put a coop and run on high ground, that drains well, so you won't have so much muddy coop problems. Chickens need to be dry, dry, dry.

2. As far as you can, put a coop with the ventilation lined up with your prevailing breezes, and away from the direction of your storms. If you are not sure of these (who is these days?), check with your local National Weather Service website.

3. As far as you can, arrange for some sort of shade over your coop and run. Preferably deciduous so the girls will enjoy winter sun, but summer shade.
 
We own a small farm in CT. But we don't live there. Too many predators, so I cannot see having birds if we are not close by. However our town has permitted fowl in town. Will check the regulations today. I have build a coop or two for a friend in Texas. Attended a fowl auction while there a saw the most beautiful Coronation Sussex hens and one rooster. I wasn't prepared to bring them home at the time. And I know raising chickens isn't as simple as providing feed and water. So I am starting from the ground up. Question: Is there an all encompassing manual for raising chickens? Coop size for chickens by breed, number of birds? Where to buy King George Coronation Sussex Chickens? And whatever happened to the American Sussex Association?
Welcome to BYC.
Did you read this yet?
http://www.americansussex.org/
 

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