- Jan 18, 2010
- 250
- 3
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Ok, so, now that the laws in my city have been clarified and the process has become less jump-through-hoops (still a lot of hoops!), I've re-opened the chicken question, as in, should self and husband become the owners of chickens in our backyard?
I need some help from people who have chickens, though. My only experience with chickens was waaay back when I was a kid earning pin money and I used to babysit for a woman who worked wierd night hours as a nurse. They had a lot of chickens (12, maybe 15?) in what I thought was an awfully small space, and the chickens were mean little buggers. All of them bit and scratched and chased me around, and I had to go into their pen to find the eggs every morning before I left the woman's house. I didn't have to feed them or anything (thank goodness!), just collect their eggs and make sure that they weren't hurt.
I have been studying up on chickens for a while now, and have been reading a lot of threads here, and I have some questions.
1) We live in a 1600ish (probably closer to 1650 or 1700) sq. foot home on .13 acres. Our property is pretty much a typical rectangle, with the front yard and the house taking up the 1st 2/3rds. The back yard is fenced with a 4' fence, which can and does shrink to a 3" fence in the winter due to snow. We need room for our two Standard Poodles to run around back there as well. My solution to this was to get a coop for the birds, then fence an area around it, so that the coop would be in the middle, or something like that. Also netting on top, since we have raccoons, hawks, and eagles. Oh yeah, and the backyard is southern, entirely, and totally without shade. We're working on that, but it's not going to be a quick fix.
2) We don't want roosters (we have to get permission from our neighbors and roosters just aren't an option, I'm afraid) and since there's just the two of us, 3 hens is probably a good #. Any more chickens than 3 and the yearly permit fee jumps sharply. How much room do 3 hens need?
3) Winter. We live in Central Minnesota, an area notorious for its harsh winters. We routinely go well below zero and *always* have wind because we're on the prairie. How do we keep our chickens not only alive but happy and thriving in this sort of weather? Humans still die every winter here in the metro. . . we don't want our chickens to suffer.
4) We also have two dogs. 2 Standard Poodles, one approaching 40 lbs and one approaching 50 lbs. They are both 'birdy' and the smaller one is in the beginning stages of tracking training. How do we keep them from, er, complicating things?
5) For 3 hens, what size coop do we need? And can somebody who has absolutely no building experience at all make a coop? A good one? Oh yeah, and how do we clean it and will the city take our chicken poop, what we don't compost? One more thing . . . it's rare that we're home at dusk, what do we do about getting the chickens back in their coops? Do those automatic door things really work?
6) What kind of hens should we get? I absolutely refuse to hatch eggs or have teeny brand-new chicks. We have a cat. There is a feral cat who lives behind our house and loves to snack on songbirds. And the two dogs, and a cold basement . . . yeah, chicks/eggs aren't an option. We don't have a feed supply store within a decent driving distance (that I know of) . . . 30mins one way . . .to buy young chickens. Am I limited to Craigslist? I am willing to drive a fair distance (2 hours one way) if necessary to get good chickens, but is that good *for* the chickens? What's the best way to find young hens locally?
7) And speaking of no feed stores, where do I get food for the birds? And how much will it cost?
Help! I still don't know whether getting chickens is the right thing for hubby and I, and I have absolutely no clue about what kind of chickens to get, even. I know that I'd prefer friendly, very quiet, dependable egg layers who don't mind living 90% of the time in their pen (whether in or out of their coop, I'd like to give them that option) and who have some aesthetic appeal . . .but there are so many different kinds of chickens out there, I dunno. Hubby is no help, he jokingly said that we ought to have black hens to go with our black dogs
The only thing he knows is that he wants brown eggs. I personally love the . . . Silkies? The ones with the fluffy pom-poms on their heads? Look like Muppets? They make me laugh, they're cute. But maybe they're too delicate for our climate.
I'd love to hear your opinions on what we should do, or even if you think we're not ready. But please, don't just say 'Don't do it' or 'You want X chicken' -- please say *why* you think that way. We'd really appreciate it.
Thanks much!
I need some help from people who have chickens, though. My only experience with chickens was waaay back when I was a kid earning pin money and I used to babysit for a woman who worked wierd night hours as a nurse. They had a lot of chickens (12, maybe 15?) in what I thought was an awfully small space, and the chickens were mean little buggers. All of them bit and scratched and chased me around, and I had to go into their pen to find the eggs every morning before I left the woman's house. I didn't have to feed them or anything (thank goodness!), just collect their eggs and make sure that they weren't hurt.
I have been studying up on chickens for a while now, and have been reading a lot of threads here, and I have some questions.
1) We live in a 1600ish (probably closer to 1650 or 1700) sq. foot home on .13 acres. Our property is pretty much a typical rectangle, with the front yard and the house taking up the 1st 2/3rds. The back yard is fenced with a 4' fence, which can and does shrink to a 3" fence in the winter due to snow. We need room for our two Standard Poodles to run around back there as well. My solution to this was to get a coop for the birds, then fence an area around it, so that the coop would be in the middle, or something like that. Also netting on top, since we have raccoons, hawks, and eagles. Oh yeah, and the backyard is southern, entirely, and totally without shade. We're working on that, but it's not going to be a quick fix.
2) We don't want roosters (we have to get permission from our neighbors and roosters just aren't an option, I'm afraid) and since there's just the two of us, 3 hens is probably a good #. Any more chickens than 3 and the yearly permit fee jumps sharply. How much room do 3 hens need?
3) Winter. We live in Central Minnesota, an area notorious for its harsh winters. We routinely go well below zero and *always* have wind because we're on the prairie. How do we keep our chickens not only alive but happy and thriving in this sort of weather? Humans still die every winter here in the metro. . . we don't want our chickens to suffer.
4) We also have two dogs. 2 Standard Poodles, one approaching 40 lbs and one approaching 50 lbs. They are both 'birdy' and the smaller one is in the beginning stages of tracking training. How do we keep them from, er, complicating things?
5) For 3 hens, what size coop do we need? And can somebody who has absolutely no building experience at all make a coop? A good one? Oh yeah, and how do we clean it and will the city take our chicken poop, what we don't compost? One more thing . . . it's rare that we're home at dusk, what do we do about getting the chickens back in their coops? Do those automatic door things really work?
6) What kind of hens should we get? I absolutely refuse to hatch eggs or have teeny brand-new chicks. We have a cat. There is a feral cat who lives behind our house and loves to snack on songbirds. And the two dogs, and a cold basement . . . yeah, chicks/eggs aren't an option. We don't have a feed supply store within a decent driving distance (that I know of) . . . 30mins one way . . .to buy young chickens. Am I limited to Craigslist? I am willing to drive a fair distance (2 hours one way) if necessary to get good chickens, but is that good *for* the chickens? What's the best way to find young hens locally?
7) And speaking of no feed stores, where do I get food for the birds? And how much will it cost?
Help! I still don't know whether getting chickens is the right thing for hubby and I, and I have absolutely no clue about what kind of chickens to get, even. I know that I'd prefer friendly, very quiet, dependable egg layers who don't mind living 90% of the time in their pen (whether in or out of their coop, I'd like to give them that option) and who have some aesthetic appeal . . .but there are so many different kinds of chickens out there, I dunno. Hubby is no help, he jokingly said that we ought to have black hens to go with our black dogs

I'd love to hear your opinions on what we should do, or even if you think we're not ready. But please, don't just say 'Don't do it' or 'You want X chicken' -- please say *why* you think that way. We'd really appreciate it.
Thanks much!