Shadrach's Ex Battery and Rescued chickens thread.

One question, do you guys ever just throw poo filled shavings directly in a garden bed? I was thinking at the end of growing season just covering all the beds with uncomposted coop litter.
I don't know about the wood shavings. I've mostly dealt with chickens where the litter was dry leaves, shredded newspaper, sometimes a bit of hay or straw, and similar things.

My mother would pile the chicken bedding (complete with lots of droppings) on the garden beds every spring and fall, and rototill it in. A few months later, it was all nicely broken down (as in, you could not longer find visible pieces of newspaper or hay or whatever.) That soil had lots of earthworms, too. I remember hauling the stuff, seeing her rototill, and planting seeds all on the same day-- but maybe not all in the same garden bed. She might have fertilized one bed, and planted seeds in a different one that day, and waited until later to plant in the one that just got manure. I never really understood her system, but I know she had it planned out somehow.

I'm pretty sure that tilling it into the soil helped it break down faster, both from being mixed with the dirt (and bacteria and worms), and because the rototiller chopped everything up into small pieces (more surface area helps it decompose faster.)
 
They are Ex Battery hens. There are just two of them. Their owner had never kept chickens before and took them on under pressure. It seems that the chickens spend most of their day roaming around a back garden. The person who keeps them put a lot of work into learning something about them, so as chicken lives go these two have a good life including vet care.
Thanks. That's interesting. Next door has just 2 also & they spend a lot of time along the fence line chatting to my girls.
 
Thanks! You all are very helpful!
Some baby tax:
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Shocking the gardeners don't relieve the chickens of that prized hill of future fertilizer. What kind of gardeners are these guys anyways?! 🤯 oh, lazy. Got it.
I don't think in this case it's the plot renters problem. This is a C problem. The poop needs collecting which I have just started to do.
I'll also bag up what I dig out of the run.
 
I'd be begging for it. Such a great supply so conveniently close and possibly free fertilizer- already aged! I would def offer my services or materials in trade for it so I could have the prettiest garden with the best yields possible. Also, conditioning soil and adding micro nutrients. Isn't that what the allotments are all about? Or just a stand so someone does not take their view?

I have 1 friend who gives me a bucket to fill with pooh for her, plus plenty people who would love for me to bag my composted poop for them.
As it is, we sell our composted horse poop for 5 bucks a feed bag and that is a screaming sweet deal. Just does miracles for ones soil.
Maybe I should charge for what I'll be collecting.🤔
 
I didn't get much done. Too busy chatting to three lots of allotment holders.:oops:
This lot have been very kind to me and say the place is a lot better since I've been going there. Nice to be appreciated.:)
I did get Henry's legs done, and the Golden Comet with the SLM. Oh and cleaned out the coops, and the water of course, and collected the eggs. I gave six to one of the allotment holders (part of my egg share I might add). I sell around two dozen a week now which helps with the cost of the feed and stuff I buy.
I leave C half a dozen a day nicley wrapped for C to collect in the mornings. The rest it seems are now mine.:confused: The hens are laying around 100 per week atm.
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Getting the geese shut in for the night.
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I didn't get much done. Too busy chatting to three lots of allotment holders.:oops:
This lot have been very kind to me and say the place is a lot better since I've been going there. Nice to be appreciated.:)
I did get Henry's legs done, and the Golden Comet with the SLM. Oh and cleaned out the coops, and the water of course, and collected the eggs. I gave six to one of the allotment holders (part of my egg share I might add). I sell around two dozen a week now which helps with the cost of the feed and stuff I buy.
I leave C half a dozen a day nicley wrapped for C to collect in the mornings. The rest it seems are now mine.:confused: The hens are laying around 100 per week atm.
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Getting the geese shut in for the night.
View attachment 3175302
As far as I can tell without my glasses on, the chickens look extremely healthy in that photo Shad.
 
Wow, thats a lot if eggs shad! 🥚

And can I ask a cat question. 🐈?
My chickens always make a typical and recognisable sound if they spot a cat. Completely different than the egg song or the ‘I want feed’ begging.
The chickens often spot a cat before I do. So if I hear them making this sound I look around to see where the cat is.
Today it took me a few minutes to figure it out. But finally I found one of the neighbours cat between the high plants lurking and luring. Like a lion who wants to ambush a gazelle. The chickens make this ‘I spotted a cat’ sound , step away a little, but don’t really bother to back off.

Who recognises this? Or experiences something similar?
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Tax for asking.
 

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