Noisy Girls

I feel your pain! I have three "illegal" chickens (EEs) in my suburban neighborhood. Before they started laying, no one would have ever known they existed in my yard. Now that they're laying......OMG that egg song!! Of course I find it charming and adorable, but unfortunately one of my neighbors does not--especially at 6am (chickens are getting up earlier now that sunrise is so early). We have 1/2 acre lots---plenty of space in between homes--- but you can hear the girls all the way down the street. My husband is embarassed, my neighbor is threatening to turn me in, and I'm heartbroken that we might lose our pets. I don't know what to do short of keeping them in the garage until 7-8am so that they don't wake people up. Like one poster said, mine will sing the egg song before they lay, after they lay, and when another chicken is laying. It is quite the chorus!

Right now I'm just praying that the county will follow suit of the adjacent city that just legalized backyard hens. And soon.....before my pets end up as (gasp)...dinner!
 
Quote:
Funny, I have 2 very quiet SLW's.

Oh, individual birds are so funny. I didn't get SLW because I heard they were noisy. Sigh...

They sure are entertaining.
 
My BO and Wyandotte sing occasionally. I noticed they did the egg song for awhile, but now that my BO is broody, she only cackles when I force her to leave her nesting box and go into the backyard. She'll run/ fly across the yard cackling really loud, like a car taking off. Then, she's quiet.

On a side note, if anyone can tell me WHEN my BO will stop being broody, I'd love it. It has been two weeks and she is still a giant puffball, and I have to make her go into the yard for free time. I miss my old BO behavior.
sad.png
 
Quote:
OH NO!!! That's my next bird. I don't want to hear that.

I have two BR and Two Buff Rocks. The one BR is VERY quiet, the other a bit noisy only when she wants to lay and when her BF leaves to lay. The two buffs are mostly quiet.

I think it is more "personality" within the breeds. I chose the BR and Buff rocks because they are supposed to be docile birds. My suggestion would be to get a few more than you want to end up with and when they start laying pick the quiet ones you would like to keep and sell the others.
 
Last edited:
i feel your pain; i have three backyarders in an elevated coop with an attached, meshed-in 12' x 4' run. a barred rock, an ameraucana, and a buff orpington. the ameraucana is by far the loudest, but she's always been a sort of dominant hen and a bit rooster-like. i live in suburbia, as well, with good neighbors on one side and people behind me i don't even know. there's one house on my other side that i've stayed far away from the people there since they are shady and i have reported to Code Compliance for various issues with their behaviors (mostly, incessant dog barking at all hours), so our relationship is strained, to say the least. they were the ones i was most worried about when i got the chickens. well, the chickens squawk usually once or twice during the day -- almost always around egg-laying time. though lately, two of them have hopped up on the outdoor roost and "bok-bok-bok-BOKKKK"ed in unison. and as you know, it is LOUD. it usually only lasts for 1-3 minutes. then i don't hear it again all day. but when my ameraucana wants me to come outside (i work at home), she will "BRAAAAAAK-brak-braaaaak" constantly while watching my house. the first few days i had them, i'd go outside CONSTANTLY and give them treats, i thought it was so cute and sweet. well, i learned quickly that they are pretty darn smart and learn to anticipate that i'll come out and feed them all the time, so i stopped right away! (i detail my experiences in my blog at www.thecityhen.wordpress.com, if you want to check the earlier posts out.)

here are the things that i think are helping protect me and my flock from my shady neighbors: 1) my coop is out of their site, on the other side of my garage from their house, so the likelihood that they hear the chickens and/or know they're MINE is slim; 2) i put some extra trees in to block any view they'd have of me going out to my coop for various feedings, etc. (recommend fish-tail palms -- relatively inexpensive and HUGE at the top but not so bushy at bottom); 3) if the chickens are too loud for too long, i run out there and hiss at them (read this in one of my backyard chicken raising books) and clap and stand there until they shut up, then go back inside -- i feel terrible yelling at them, but i know how it feels to cringe at the neighbors' potential code complaints... -- and it usually works for at least awhile. i'm hoping they get the picture soon (i've only had them a little over two months.) 4) bottom line is IF you get a complaint from someone, i can't imagine how it would be any worse than people who get dog-barking complaints -- they usually just get a warning and are asked to start keeping their dogs quieter. i'm hoping it's the same if i'm on that end of the complaint.

one more note: i LOAD up their run with treats and snacks and cover them with sand and hay, hang romaine lettuce from a wire from the ceiling, fill their food bins (crumbles and scratch) so they have free choice food all day, and i'll often (if i'm gone for the day) pull weeds from the lawn and cut up some longer grass and throw it in there like confetti so they have to work to get it. i vary their snacks each day so they don't get bored. and i play Public Radio in my garage so they can hear the sound of voices and music. i know this won't completely obliterate their occasional noise, but it sure does help. if your problem is mainly in the morning, perhaps load up your run with treats the night before (after they've gone to roost) and they will come out in the morning and be focused on the food and treats. i do this every saturday eve so that i can sleep in on sundays. this past sunday, i didn't hear a peep out of them until i came out the back door at 9:30 am! and even then, it was just a few soft greetings.

my chickens are happy pullets giving me one egg each per day, so i don't believe their noise is related to unhappiness. it's definitely an inherent hen thing, and as hard as it was for me to scour the forums for solutions about how to make them quiet and read things like "oh, it's just the happy egg song!" [from people who obviously don't have scary neighbors that will turn them in], i have really had to understand and accept that they will be making noise occasionally, and IF i get a code warning, i have to deal with it then. since i've come to that conclusion, i've been a lot less stressed.
 
Ya i have some noisy girls. My Bo and SLW's are so quiet, but my white leghorns holy cow, they scream at me for anything and everything. My EE's are very talkative but not like my leghorns, one of my EE's follows me around just talking to me like if she bugs me enough ill give here something. >> Lucky we have 5 acres, and everyone around us has chickens, but im like you need to quiet down ladies or you might disappear, my father made me sell my two roo's cause he said they where two loud, im like dont make the opening of the coop face your room.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom