Official BYC Poll: What Is Your Least Favorite Thing About Keeping Chickens?

What is your least favorite thing about keeping chickens?

  • Cleaning out poopy bedding.

    Votes: 146 31.1%
  • Preventing picking and overcrowding.

    Votes: 37 7.9%
  • Keeping one step ahead of predators

    Votes: 80 17.0%
  • Coping with illness/parasites.

    Votes: 194 41.3%
  • Refreshing & refilling the feed and water.

    Votes: 33 7.0%
  • Closing your flock up at night and letting them out in the morning.

    Votes: 25 5.3%
  • Dealing with aggressive roosters

    Votes: 45 9.6%
  • Nothing! I love everything about it.

    Votes: 29 6.2%
  • Other (elaborate in a reply below)

    Votes: 68 14.5%
  • Dealing with death in the flock

    Votes: 199 42.3%

  • Total voters
    470
Deaths are something one has to come to terms with. It’s a natural event that is unavoidable. Reducing population while unpleasant is usually necessary, sometimes for the benefit of the chickens, sometimes for the benefit of the keeper. I don’t like it but it’s one of those things that are unavoidable if one keeps chickens.
But, there are a few other things that leave me tearing my hair out.

Broody hens breaking eggs in their nest. It’s a complete disaster and it can take hours to sort out.
If for example you’ve limited the number of eggs the broody can sit on and hatch, that’s one less possible hatching.
The underside of the hen gets covered in sticky egg and if you don’t get her clean the other eggs stick to her underside. Not only can she not turn them, when she adjusts her position in the nest any eggs stuck to her now act as a wrecking ball and smash into the remaining eggs as they swing about underneath her.

The hen has to come out. She has to be cleaned off and thrown in a dust bath and kept there until the worst of the egg is soaked up. The nest has to be cleaned out and this means the eggs are disturbed; some of them will have to be cleaned off.
The really annoying thing is I have never had to do the nest and hen cleaning when the hen has nested away from a coop.

The dust bath disaster is another one that can send me into a fit of rage and then deep depression for the next couple of hours. It happens like this.

I’ll be sitting at the kitchen table with a few chickens wandering in and out of the house. One of the tribe will be missing and I go to find her. She’ll often be just outside the door in one of the favourite dust bath spots by the fence. I go back to my chair by the kitchen table and get on with whatever I happened to be doing. The hen that was in the dust bath wanders in. I leap up off the chair knowing in an instant by looking at the hen that she hasn’t shaken the dust off. I cover about half the distance between the chair and the recently arrived hen in semi crouched stumble shouting at the hen to get out; then she shakes! Dust goes everywhere. It travels three meters sometimes in all directions and that incudes up.

The hen of course stands there looking at me with that what’s your problem kind of look and gets most indignant as I propel her back out the door in a most undignified manner.

It’s out with the broom and duster, clean off the pots and pans, the cooker top, the sink, not to mention extensive floor sweeping. I’m very particular about how often I dust my house; once or twice a year is quite enough.


I smoke. I know I shouldn’t but I’ve established a very understandable excuse for it. As you may be aware, smokers lose to some degree or other their sense of smell. Frankly, despite all the health warnings I would be tempted to recommend to anyone who has broody hens to take up smoking.
Broody poop! It’s the most vile smelling concoction I have ever had the misfortune of assaulting my my olfactory glands.
 
I hate cleaning the coop! The smell, ugh!
And I have to do it every other week! :barnie :sick

The worst thing is always death, each chicken is a family member and I love each one more than anyone could ever know. It's also upsetting having to say goodbye to gorgeous, friendly roosters. :hit

I haven't had any diseases or injuries yet, but I always worry about it.

Each difficulty is worth it, though. I am so much happier now than when I didn't have chickens, even though the road is sometimes rocky. Each chicken makes my life better and more exciting.
But loving my chickens has it's side effect, which brings me to the next worst thing...

Controlling how many I can keep! I am a true hatchaholic and I have OCD (obsessive chicken disorder). It's very hard for me to not think about getting more chickens!
 
* I dislike gathering cu yds of leaf litter a couple times a year to fill the hen houses and throw in the run - particularly in summer, when there isn't much leaf litter on the ground, its hot, and its stupid humid.

I chose poop (it's everywhere!) and feeding/watering because both of these chores must be completed regardless of how hot it is. Feels like hell down here in Texas most of the time.

These are the days that I remind myself that I'm not carrying water in below-freezing weather.
 
Sickness and death are the worst. I have never lost a chicken, but I get scared when they don’t feel or act like their regular selfs.

However, I go into the nice, safe, predator proof run and count 5/6,
and look everywhere only to find they are behind something in a hole bigger then them. :thOh and Tiny takes dirt baths in her food while the other chickens look at her like she is crazy. 🤣
 
Dealing with pests / illness. Since I have a homestead and all the chickens on our farm have a job, I have to weigh whether or not it's even worth it to treat. Thankfully we have not had any pests like lice or mites, but we have made the decision in the past to get rid of a chicken that was almost blind because she doesn't fit in with our vision for the farm.
 

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