- Thread starter
- #11
- Jan 14, 2015
- 5
- 2
- 59
Thanks for all the welcomes.
I have researched my City's ordinances - I am allowed "5 birds/5,000 sf of lot space with a minimum lot size of 5,000 sf". That is "birds" - not specific on species or gender. Since a coop is not a dwelling unit (for people) and not a storage space of 200 sf or more, it doesn't require a permit. Since I have an 11,000 sf lot, I assume I could have up to 11 birds. I only have 6 birds (no roosters!), so there's room to expand if I want. For now my neighbors are intrigued and ask me questions - like "are they hard to care for?" or "how many eggs do you get?" Most of them tell me they don't hear the girls squawk, but the ones that do hear them tell me "it is a lovely sound".
I do plan to share eggs - as I share fruit from my fruit trees. Plus I am nice to my neighbors and give them fudge and cookies every Christmas.
After all, these are the folks that watch my house when I am gone
I have researched my City's ordinances - I am allowed "5 birds/5,000 sf of lot space with a minimum lot size of 5,000 sf". That is "birds" - not specific on species or gender. Since a coop is not a dwelling unit (for people) and not a storage space of 200 sf or more, it doesn't require a permit. Since I have an 11,000 sf lot, I assume I could have up to 11 birds. I only have 6 birds (no roosters!), so there's room to expand if I want. For now my neighbors are intrigued and ask me questions - like "are they hard to care for?" or "how many eggs do you get?" Most of them tell me they don't hear the girls squawk, but the ones that do hear them tell me "it is a lovely sound".
I do plan to share eggs - as I share fruit from my fruit trees. Plus I am nice to my neighbors and give them fudge and cookies every Christmas.
After all, these are the folks that watch my house when I am gone
