Hens don't seem to mind the occasional chase and keep coming back for more.
Chicken Confidential
My journey to build a coop and raise a few hens.
Wednesday, January 18, 2017
Chickens & Dogs
Our pups love the chickens. Here is Posey chasing the 3 hens and fighting over mealy worms.
Friday, November 4, 2016
Trapped!!
So true story... My friend
was sweet enough to give us some new chickens and so I spent the better part of today reinforcing our coop to avoid another chicken massacre repeat of 2015. So after doing such a good job and installing a self latching latch I somehow locked myself in the coop with these 3 girls for almost 30 minutes. No phone, no tools, no kids around to save me. Just some useless hens and dogs who are apparently not trained to undo latches (I am blaming Brent). I considered yelling for neighbors but that is just too embarrassing to explain when they find you. I might have died but thankfully my construction staples are not so strong as to keep me locked up forever. Hallelujah free at last!!
was sweet enough to give us some new chickens and so I spent the better part of today reinforcing our coop to avoid another chicken massacre repeat of 2015. So after doing such a good job and installing a self latching latch I somehow locked myself in the coop with these 3 girls for almost 30 minutes. No phone, no tools, no kids around to save me. Just some useless hens and dogs who are apparently not trained to undo latches (I am blaming Brent). I considered yelling for neighbors but that is just too embarrassing to explain when they find you. I might have died but thankfully my construction staples are not so strong as to keep me locked up forever. Hallelujah free at last!!
More Backyard Hens
Of course there was a flock of 20 something loose hens running around the Heights. That is just where we live. My friend and her girls wrangles up most of them and donated them to Wabash, but then there were 3 more left. I told her I would take them meaning I had to reinforce the coop after the last "Great Chicken Massacre of 2015". Why am I such a sucker for projects?
Thursday, July 16, 2015
Starting up again- moving to the country.. at least on the weekends
Well it has been a few years here at the urban farm. The animals at one point consisted of 1 dog- sweet Dulce- who passed in March 2013, two cats who are rarely seen, one turtle (later released at the Arboretum), and 1-5 chickens (chronicled here in this blog). The current animal status is 0 chickens (f...ing raccoons or opossums), same 2 annoying hidden cats, and one new golden retriever, Goose, who after my children is my favorite thing in this world. But... also in the last two years we have moved a step closer to my dream of a small family farm/ zombie fallout shelter in the country. Although my husband thinks this is a recreational property for him to hunt/ fish on, my secret plans are much bigger. We now have 44 acres to stock with as many furry friends and crazy projects that I can. Step one in my horde is our barn cats- 3 babies and a mama- found on Craigslist- and now happily situated in our barn. Next I will work on transplanting/ rebuilding our coop in the country. Eventually goats, maybe some donkeys (for protection), and who knows what else....let the fun begin!
Lots of space.. |
Barn cats...check |
Heaven |
Sunday, May 13, 2012
Hens for Houston
http://hensforhouston.com/
I hear effort is spearheaded by a young neighbor girl in the Heights. You go girl!
I hear effort is spearheaded by a young neighbor girl in the Heights. You go girl!
Vision:
“Hens for Houston” is working to promote a sustainable and progressive Houston in which city dwellers can keep hens on the small city lots such as those found inside the Beltway and the 610 loop.Thursday, September 29, 2011
Murder!
I almost took pictures of the scene but it would have been too disturbing for young readers...stop reading now if you are faint of heart. A few weeks ago I heard a the girls making a bunch of noise and when I checked it out there was a opossum in the coop. Since the door was open the girls had escaped unharmed. The ugly thing just looked at me with it's evil beady eyes but I did not think much of it. Next day it was gone but so was CooCoo. I thought since she had totally disappeared that maybe the hawk had come back and gotten her since she was a small chicken. But the smell the next day led me to her dead body behind the coop. I think she might have flown there and gotten stuck but I am just not sure. Since she was my son's favorite he was devastated. We both cried for her. Then, a few days later I come out to find both red hens murdered in their coop! It was horrible. This time my son just shrugged it off and asked when we could get another one. He became callus pretty fast as you have to be living on a farm. The dead chickens stunk up to high heaven and I had to use heavy gloves and trash bags to clean up the crime scene while almost loosing my lunch. Thank you husband dear. So now with one poor black chicken left we are only getting one egg a day. And poor Blackie (as my kid has so creatively renamed her) hangs out on the back porch desperately wanting some friends.
As an aside, the five year old asks me if possums do not like black things and is that why he did not eat Blackie. I responded, yes, possums are racist. Joke was totally lost on him.
Update: Nov/ Decemberish 2014- Apparently the opossum does not mind killing all colors of chickens- Blackie was murdered and dragged across the yard almost under the fence. Makes me think that maybe it was a fat raccoon since she was a big hen and would be difficult for a opossum to drag.
As an aside, the five year old asks me if possums do not like black things and is that why he did not eat Blackie. I responded, yes, possums are racist. Joke was totally lost on him.
Update: Nov/ Decemberish 2014- Apparently the opossum does not mind killing all colors of chickens- Blackie was murdered and dragged across the yard almost under the fence. Makes me think that maybe it was a fat raccoon since she was a big hen and would be difficult for a opossum to drag.
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
New Neighbors
Exciting news. We hear Sonoma Wine Bar is moving in next door. This could be a good thing since it will be within baby monitor distance or could be a bad thing with having more traffic and all. That is where excess eggs come in handy.
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Chicken Bath
Here is another day at the Henhouse of Horrors for our poor girls. My kid and the neighbor kid put the girls in the dog's water bucket and then proceeded to pummel them with a large ball. Fortunately I was able to stop the torture before any hens got hurt.
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Tour de Coup
I love the idea of doing a Tour de Coop like they do in Portland or Raleigh. See the link below for Portland's fun annual event. I keep tossing the idea around of doing a Heights Coop Crawl or Tour de Coop of our own, and have even gotten a few other area chicken farmers on board, but when it comes down to it I am too lazy or busy to actually organize it. One of these days I will though. Trick is to open it up to interested folks but keep the authorities away since our hobby is actually still illegal in the City of Houston (shame I know). One idea is to make it a biking tour and offer egg based cocktails at each stop. Other things I would like to do with my life if I had 10 free minutes include: changing the city ordinance to allow urban chickens (within reason), protest Heights area Walmart and other bad developments, get my nails done, get botox, go to the doctor for the pnumonia I think I have had for a month, go to Spain for a month of language classes, and oh yeah- spend more time with my kids. So once I get those 10 free minutes I am going to plan this Tour de Coops I swear! Stay posted for dates.
http://growing-gardens.org/portland-gardening-resources/chickens.php
http://growing-gardens.org/portland-gardening-resources/chickens.php
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Back in the Money
Praise the Lord, all the girls are a' layin' again. Now to celebrate I need to find an enemy's house to go throw eggs at.
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Conspiracy Theory Resolved!
So after talking with some other neighboring chicken farmers I found the answer to my non-laying hens. They are molting! Here I was thinking I knew almost everything about these things. Goes to show what little I know.
Molting is the shedding and renewal of feathers and occurs about once a year. The order in which the different sections of the bird lose their feathers is fairly defined: head, neck, body, wings and tail. Molting is a difficult time for birds, since it involves hormonal fluctuations and increased energy requirements. Eliminate stress during this time: keep temperature in a narrow range (70-80o F), provide a high quality diet, and each day mist the birds with a fine spray or provide a pan for bathing. It takes about seven weeks for new feathers to complete their growth cycle. Domesticated chickens bred for high egg production have a definite molting pattern. A natural molt does not normally occur until the end of an extended, intensive laying period. Chickens that have been laying heavily for one year or longer molt easily in the fall since this is the natural molting season. If they finish their intensive year in the spring, they do not molt easily and may wait until the fall. A chicken loses feathers from various sections of its body in a definite pattern. The order is: head; neck; feather tracks of the breast, thighs and back; wing and tail feathers. Some birds molt more slowly than others; some molt earlier. A good high producing flock tends to molt late and rapidly. Decreasing day-length is the normal trigger for molting. Therefore, lighting programs for egg production flocks should provide either constant or increasing day-length. Stresses caused by temporary feed or water shortage, disease, cold temperatures, or sudden changes in the lighting program can cause a partial or premature molt.
So I guess the ladies are saved from becoming chicken pot pie for now.
Molting is the shedding and renewal of feathers and occurs about once a year. The order in which the different sections of the bird lose their feathers is fairly defined: head, neck, body, wings and tail. Molting is a difficult time for birds, since it involves hormonal fluctuations and increased energy requirements. Eliminate stress during this time: keep temperature in a narrow range (70-80o F), provide a high quality diet, and each day mist the birds with a fine spray or provide a pan for bathing. It takes about seven weeks for new feathers to complete their growth cycle. Domesticated chickens bred for high egg production have a definite molting pattern. A natural molt does not normally occur until the end of an extended, intensive laying period. Chickens that have been laying heavily for one year or longer molt easily in the fall since this is the natural molting season. If they finish their intensive year in the spring, they do not molt easily and may wait until the fall. A chicken loses feathers from various sections of its body in a definite pattern. The order is: head; neck; feather tracks of the breast, thighs and back; wing and tail feathers. Some birds molt more slowly than others; some molt earlier. A good high producing flock tends to molt late and rapidly. Decreasing day-length is the normal trigger for molting. Therefore, lighting programs for egg production flocks should provide either constant or increasing day-length. Stresses caused by temporary feed or water shortage, disease, cold temperatures, or sudden changes in the lighting program can cause a partial or premature molt.
So I guess the ladies are saved from becoming chicken pot pie for now.
Monday, October 11, 2010
Conspiracy Theory
So we have only been getting one egg a day since CooCoo went broody awhile back. She is back to normal now, but not laying.. and somehow has convinced 2 of the others not to lay either. I think she has started an egg strike to get back at me for kicking her off of her broody ass. Since she has been with us the longest (and also the smallest thus probably has a small chick complex) she probably hold some sort of sway over the others. At least one of my girls is breaking the strike and laying. Until I find out who the producer is the non-producers are fairly safe from me ringing their necks. But there ain't no free rent around here so I better start getting my 4 eggs a day again.
Thursday, September 23, 2010
Gone Broody
So one of the ladies has decided to try and hatch our unfertilized eggs and gone broody (she sits on the eggs all day).. I often go to the forum on Backyard Chickens.com to find the answers. Apparently I am supposed to kick her off the lay box over and over until she gets the pic that no babies are gonna come out of those eggs. Also, good news on One Eye Lucile- her bad eye is no longer the size of a marble. A few days on antibiotics in their water got it down to normal (however it is still unusable so she will still be one eyed). I learn something new about this chicken thing every week.
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Vet's view: Backyard chickens are fun, and lay the best eggs
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Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Benefit # 10 from backyard chickens- no salmonella
From CNN:
About 1,300 cases of salmonella have been linked to eggs from Wright County Eggs and Hillandale Farms of Iowa, forcing a recall of their products in at least 17 states, the FDA and the Centers for Disease Control reported. Wright County Egg has recalled 380 million eggs, while Hillandale Farms recalled 170 million eggs.
"We have a very complicated network of food distribution in this country," Hamburg told CNN's "American Morning" on Monday. "You start with a couple of farms in Iowa and you can get nationwide exposure."
About 1,300 cases of salmonella have been linked to eggs from Wright County Eggs and Hillandale Farms of Iowa, forcing a recall of their products in at least 17 states, the FDA and the Centers for Disease Control reported. Wright County Egg has recalled 380 million eggs, while Hillandale Farms recalled 170 million eggs.
Video: What is salmonella?
Video: Bad eggs the beginning?
Video: Still eating eggs
Video: Safe from salmonella?
RELATED TOPICS
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Chicken dinners coming soon
So still only two hens laying.. Lucile and Black Claudette are way over the 20-22 weeks they are supposed to start laying at. Anyone in the mood for chicken dinner? We brought back some good jerk seasoning from Jamaica that I will start sprinkling on them to motivate them to lay.
Thursday, July 22, 2010
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
So many eggs, so little time
We are doing a good job at our egg production to consumption ratio with only the two chickens laying, but I have a feeling that very soon the other two will get on board ( I think they are close or over 20 weeks) and start laying. In fact I saw a third egg in the nest the other day but had to question myself if I forgot to do the egg collecting the day before and maybe it was really just Henrietta's egg. We will see- I just don't want to get all excited before I am sure. Once that happens our egg p:c will jump and we can get into business.
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Intern
Since my international readers are telling me I don't post enough- this is for you....Although I really don't have fabulous news. You guessed it, we lost "Iron Man".. really- I just lost him. My guess is the hawk, but who knows. Here one day, gone the next. We really had no room in the coop anyway, especially since my friend, Nancy Jane's hens are staying with us for the month. Maybe when the boarders are gone we will try to find some full sized Auracana Hens- no more of this chick rearing business.
On a brighter note, I have gotten myself an intern. Yes, she is an intern at work, but I may also use her to do chores around the coop as well. I have named her Darin and am working on training her now. She is a recent grad and has no other good options, so might as well not just learn marketing (or office grunt work) but also how to clean out a filthy chicken coop. Those are real life skills.
On a brighter note, I have gotten myself an intern. Yes, she is an intern at work, but I may also use her to do chores around the coop as well. I have named her Darin and am working on training her now. She is a recent grad and has no other good options, so might as well not just learn marketing (or office grunt work) but also how to clean out a filthy chicken coop. Those are real life skills.
Monday, June 7, 2010
Don't count your chickens
Easy come, easy go.. little yellow hen was cruelly murdered by a neighbor's wiener dog. It was really tragic as she died in my hands. So now the little brown chick- "Iron Man" (my kid has been picking names again)- is lonely in her baby chick house (aka dog crate). I feel so bad as she keep peeping peeping, so now she has a temporary house pass and is running around our den. Since we really don't need 6 hens, I don't want to get a new one, but Iron Man needs company.. Maybe she will graduate to the big hen house tomorrow and just take her chances with the hawk/ cat.
Also... we found a new kind of egg in the coop! It seems that our bantam CooCoo has started laying- finally.. They are small tan eggs. I will take a pic soon. My kid ate the first of "his CooCoo"s egg once I told him there was no chance of it becoming a small chick.
Also... we found a new kind of egg in the coop! It seems that our bantam CooCoo has started laying- finally.. They are small tan eggs. I will take a pic soon. My kid ate the first of "his CooCoo"s egg once I told him there was no chance of it becoming a small chick.
Sunday, May 30, 2010
Saturday, May 29, 2010
New Additions- Easter Eggers!
I could not help myself. The Quality Feed Store (N. Main- my favorite feed store) had baby Araucana chicks and they should have blue or green colored eggs. So here we go again with the chicks- just when I though I was done with chick rearing. If these two are indeed hens and survive the hawk/ cat into adulthood, then we will have 6 hens! Wow, that is a lot of eggs. I will then be able to quit my job and sell eggs for a living. Get in line people. Look how big the others are now (CooCoo not pictures as she was being pissy)
Friday, May 7, 2010
Quote of the day
"Mom, the egg has poop on it again".. I have now trained my child to wash chick poo off eggs.
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Chicken Treats
So if you are wondering what else chickens will eat outside of chicken food, here is a chart of chicken treats.. it seems they will eat almost anything:
http://www.backyardchickens.com/web/viewblog.php?id=2593-Treats_Chart
http://www.backyardchickens.com/web/viewblog.php?id=2593-Treats_Chart
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Flock Getting Bloggy Fame
So exciting.. a fun blog about blogs wrote about my blog. This crazy blog world is so fun.. maybe someday my confidential alter ego can come out of the closet and I can make chicken farming and blogging my full time job. http://houstonblogblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/heights-has-chicken-blogger.html?showComment=1271638249383_AIe9_BElIm5kKQI1oak4EJFLDVVPSW8Hp9GSm9YfpYQ3WGZTuB_ZeBYyF0cCoyLKQdNZGdSdgh71cTxZ0EtKUIBS7mzSRMhREGsIFh8wp3yW84U0KM5MLmARIiIsnCZhzYIWGJMMQkIRl7jRrDfbjw77wRxH1H6uNMetMj8lDpP6Y5vVLHNnSpVxcBCLVFLPSYsR76ngmZxrR8TOwk--P2Z7dd3bBLhgGSs56gFMrY-g3V4EzBw3UV0#c7689203793142840823
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Almost a dozen
Darn the life of a working mother.. barely no time remaining for chicken blogging. Still only one laying hen. If CooCoo, who is over 12 weeks, does not start laying soon she may become chicken pot pie.
My 4 year old has become an expert egg collector (now if I could just get him to feed and water the chicks). He has collected 11 eggs (we lost a few to droppage) and he is pretty excited to fill out the whole egg carton. I don't know why but he won't let us eat any of the eggs until the carton is full. Kind of ruining the point of "fresh" eggs, but they will be fine. I think you can keep them up to 6 weeks or something in the fridge.. someone correct me if I am wrong. I am sure I have kept store eggs longer but probably shouldn't have.
My 4 year old has become an expert egg collector (now if I could just get him to feed and water the chicks). He has collected 11 eggs (we lost a few to droppage) and he is pretty excited to fill out the whole egg carton. I don't know why but he won't let us eat any of the eggs until the carton is full. Kind of ruining the point of "fresh" eggs, but they will be fine. I think you can keep them up to 6 weeks or something in the fridge.. someone correct me if I am wrong. I am sure I have kept store eggs longer but probably shouldn't have.
Monday, March 29, 2010
Pay dirt!
FINNAALLLYYY! Big Red Henrietta #2 payed off and laid us our first egg! My kid was so excited to collect said egg and show the neighbor that he accidentally dropped and broke it. He then proceeded to cry for about 20 minutes he was so upset- sad really. He recovered when Henrietta "laid" another (surprisingly cold) egg. I did not get a photo of the true first egg so maybe tomorrow I will post a picture.
Sunday, March 28, 2010
Farewell Claude(ette), hello Henrietta #2
Unfortunately Claudette started crowing. In respect of being a good neighbor, we have returned him to the store and exchanged him for a big fat layer hen (who is not nearly as cute). Hopefully this big red hen will be a good layer. She got loose on the way home and all hell broke loose in the car. My kid ended up with a few scratches but in one piece. He now hates the new chicken. I am sure he will change his tune when get gets to collect eggs every day.
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Breed?
In trying to figure out what type of breed the older chicks are (we now only have 2.. I have no idea where Henrietta went- I am guessing neighbor cat strikes again). After some research I think both of them are Cochins- they have very feathery feet. They should have smallish brown eggs. Here is a link in case you would like to figure out what type of chickens you would want to invest in.. We just get whatever is available at the feed store. Maybe when we get more experienced in this I will order some other fancy chickens.
Waiting waiting
So I figure my bigger chickens must be around 12 weeks now.. not really sure when they hatched, but still no eggs. They don't look fully grown so maybe we have a few more weeks. The anticipation is killing me. I hope we don't hear crowing soon though as that would mean I would have wasted all of that time and effort on a bunch of cocks. Not unlike my college dating years.
Monday, March 1, 2010
New Flock Additions
So we figured we should replace some of the downed members of the flock- mostly to guarantee we have a few laying hens- and also because the Quality Feed Store had a straight run (meaning all pullets or female chicks) of Production Reds. So we got one of them at a whopping $2.75 (expensive for a chick)and also one of a breed called "Black Giant" who is thought by the feed store owner to be "probably a hen"- only time will tell. So now we are back at 5- one grey names CoCo, one yellow named Claudette, one brown smallish one named Henrietta, new baby red named Lucile, and new baby black named Blackie for now.. quite the colorful and fabulous flock. See how big the 3 older chicks are- hopefully they will start laying this month!! You can cut the excitement with a knife around here (not really).
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Chicken Sex
So a common question I get from friends is if I need a rooster to get eggs. No, you do not need a rooster to get eggs. If there is no rooster you will just get unfertilized eggs. Then someone asked me the the other day how are the eggs fertilized- inside the chicken (aka Chicken Sex) or once they are layed? I was not sure the answer of this so of course I had to find out. So turns out chickens have sex.. fairly awkwardly but it happens. Here is a demonstration on youtube:
Monday, February 8, 2010
And then there were Three
Seems we have a "problem cat" who is hunting my flock. On the positive side, there is now only one chickie of each color making identification easy. Rest in Peace yellow chickie #2. I am hoping the three we have left are hens or we will have to start again with a new batch (or spend $20 0n a full sized hen). Now what to tell the kids about the mysterious reduction in chickens? I am thinking that three decided to go on a trip somewhere fun. Wonder if they will buy that. Thus is life on the farm. You have to be tough.
Sunday, February 7, 2010
Day 24- And then there were Four
Sadly we have lost two chicks. Yesterday morning we noticed there were only five chicks. My theory is that early that morning one of them got out of their cage (they are able to get through the wire while they are small, but cats can't get in) and was captured/ eaten by a neighborhood cat. It was the brown chick that I think was a rooster anyway. Then later that afternoon while we were around the house and the chicks were freeranging around the yard we noticed there was another one missing. This cat must have thought he has found some easy chicken dinners. We will need to keep a closer eye on these guys now. Rest in Peace, yellow chickie #3 and brown chick #2. Other than "Coo Coo" who is easily identifiable, we have not officially named any of the others. Now that there is only one brown one, she will be named Henrietta.
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Chicken n' Children
So the chicks have become a plaything for the kids. Here I was thinking that we were saving a few chickens from a miserable existence in a too cramped cage. Maybe that would have been safer for them. So far they have been handled and harassed by my kids and the neighbor kids. They have been pushed down the slide, forced to swing in the swing, and chased constantly around the yard in a game they call "chase the chicken". Here is the baby chasing them around:
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Finally finished!
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