Where can I buy battery hens?

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eenie114

Completly Hopeless
14 Years
Dec 6, 2009
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Southwestern Washington State
You know you love chickens when you think about asking your mom for an ex-battery hen for your next birthday!
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I have been looking to see where I can find the, but all the places I hav found are in the UK. Are there any in MO or KS?
Thanks!
 
3 reasons they are hard to find:

1) Companies don't want you to know what condition their birds are in when they are done with them.
2) They don't like to provide their genetics to the public. Their genes are the biggest value of their company if they breed their own.
3) They are euthanize when they are done with them.

I wouldn't suggest adopting these hens if you need them to be calm and well adjusted when they are in your backyard. They have been in a cage their entire life and are scarred. They don't necessarily adapt and become good outdoor birds and they especially don't calm down. They are flightly and would need a gentle hand and someone who has time to give them space. I would suggest having a large cage to start them out in if you do end up getting them. You need to start out slowly. Throwing them in with the other birds (even after a quarantine) could end up stressing the bird out and ruin any progress you made.
 
My Little Sister's Farm :

3 reasons they are hard to find:

1) Companies don't want you to know what condition their birds are in when they are done with them.
2) They don't like to provide their genetics to the public. Their genes are the biggest value of their company if they breed their own.
3) They are euthanize when they are done with them.

I wouldn't suggest adopting these hens if you need them to be calm and well adjusted when they are in your backyard. They have been in a cage their entire life and are scarred. They don't necessarily adapt and become good outdoor birds and they especially don't calm down. They are flightly and would need a gentle hand and someone who has time to give them space. I would suggest having a large cage to start them out in if you do end up getting them. You need to start out slowly. Throwing them in with the other birds (even after a quarantine) could end up stressing the bird out and ruin any progress you made.

our three rescued girls are lovely, happy, and took to being outdoors immediately. And luckily, they'd grown all their feathers back by autumn
smile.png

maybe we were lucky, but they just loved being able to move around and dig and all the normal chicken behaviours, and started within an hour of being let into their new home​
 
So, can anyone answer the OP's question? I would love to know where I can find some battery hens to adopt in Wisconsin! I have done web searches with no luck. Many in the UK, but not in the U.S. and certainly not in Wisconsin. Can anyone help us?
 
Battery hens here in the USA when spent are sent to slaughter.Some might get lucky if they fall off the truck or it crashes and they get rescued,but thats the only ones that i know of.
The Corporations behind these factory farms try and keep thier dirty little secret hidden.....
 
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