What a shame...
I can't believe the mindset of these antiquated city ordinances, HOA and neighbors. I haven't been around chickens since I grew up on a farm in rural western Pennsylvania in the mid 50's/early 60's, and am considering getting my own in my pristine neighborhood. All the houses have gravel landscaping on the front and sides, beautiful trees on both sides of driveway, and if you don't control the weeds, you will get a nastygram.
My backyard is huge, a complete dirt landscape with 5-ft sidewalls shared by two neighbors. My back wall faces a culdesac, there's also a culdesac in front, so I'm sorta living on a Penninsula.
Our Tucson city ordinance states that you can have up to 24 hens, no roosters, while the HOA says you can have a "reasonable number" of poultry. The bylaws didn't state a reasonable number, but at least they acknowledge poultry as long as they're not being used for commercial purposes, nand their housing must be 50-ft minimum from neighbors.
I''ve started to get cold feet about getting maybe five hens, worrying about the noise they make after laying. It seems that I always think about others before myself. I'll run out in the backyard to have a cigarette rather than expose my non-smoking visitors. I have a right to smoke in my own house, 'cause I pay all the bills up in this camp, but at the same time be considerate of others. But, I got two side neighbors and an adjacent neighbor with yapping dogs and one constantly howling/barking Pitbull. Should I feel guilty about a few clucking hens?
Sorry, I need to go back to the original posting and sign up. Y'all know that raising chickens has become one of the latest fashions over the years. Maybe get a few trained chickens, put them on leashes and stroll through the neighborhood. Keep a pooper scooper and plastic bags. Get some huggable, pettable ones...you know the little kids will flock right to them and want to hold/pet them, and bug their parents to get some.
My backyard, again, is very big, and I want to have a nice coop/run and some raised beds for planting veggies, etc. I went to MyPetChickens and fell in love with one of the coops featured there, called the Bungalow. Yeah, it's pricey at $489, but I love it, plus $175 for two runs. I could probably build it myself since I know my way around power tools, but I just don't have the energy and motivation.
The down side of these Pre-Fab coups is that they are thinly made and may last through one season. I haven't thoroughly researched the above mentioned coop, other than what's on the website, but there has to be some American-made coups better than those that come from China, etc.
I apologize for not reading all the older posts, but there is so much info here, and this topic may have been posted before about the pre-fab stuff. I try to read all old posts/archives of any newsgroup before posting a redundant question.
You Tucson folks (actually anyone) can google 7153 S Shipmans Tale Court, and take an aerial view of my back yard. --BB
Bobby Basham
Tucson, Arizona
Pima County Attorneys Office
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