Occasionally, I will join a Facebook group or list-serv to audit a culture and see their concerns.
For example, when the AKC doggy-moms were hyperventilating about PETA and HSUS attacking dairy, I was on a Maryland dairy list-serv. No dairy man mentioned PETA or HSUS; they were focused on the proper floor slope for milking sheds.
Huh.
And so, when Covid-19 hit, I was a new member of a backyard chicken group to hear that was going on in that world.
To tell the truth, a lot of the posts documented a daily litany of disease, surprise roosters, neighbor wars, zoning problems, and (of course) predation by folks unable or unwilling to build secure coops and runs.
Just this morning, the “genius” advice on the board was to take a shotgun to raiding hawks — not to build a secure run with a wire mesh top.
I almost asked: “Would you like federal charges with your eggs, sir?” Happily, someone noted the law, and another noted this was Facebook — hello DNR.
About a month ago, I finally posted an open set of questions to (perhaps) spark some soul-searching and re-evaluation about those experimenting with Covid chickens.
For what its worth, here’s what I posted, and a thumbnail summary of the answers:
LOOKING BACK ON BACKYARD CHICKENS
I realize Facebook groups about any hobby or activity generate a lot of “newbie” questions, and that during the pandemic a lot of folks may have jumped into backyard chickens a bit quick.
Nine months into the pandemic, however, I wonder:
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In short, how prepared were you, and how different was your real-world experience from what you imagined?
Would you do it again? If so, why? If not, why not?
The answers back were varied, and were as self-selecting for positive experience as the “what’s coming into my coop and eating the eggs?” questions that peppered the page were self-selecting for ignorance and sloth.
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The first response was the most commercial response:
In almost 11 years we have raised close to 8300 birds. We have hatched out 10000 eggs plus. We have lost hundreds of chicks because they just didn't thrive. We have lost another hundred plus due to hawks, foxes, coons, and coyotes.With all the chickens we have raised, we have never had issues with diseases, nor the birds having issues. This comes from my OCD ways of bio security and not letting others in.We have spent probably $95k on trailers, coops, feed, fencing, heaters, feeders, and all other farming-related items.I do not care what chefs say about eggs. I personally do not care what anyone thinks about farm eggs. They have a right to their opinion. Like I have my right.If you’re buying chicks from a feed store, you should be aware of the issues with the birds and you should truly understand that they are a business and will buy and sell what’s cheap. As far as a vacation goes, we still actively go out of town multiple times a year. This is why you hire help. And if you are spending a year not cleaning your coops you should not own birds in the first place. New pandemic chick owners should have spent time reading and researching prior to ownership.Many of the posts about their children making them buy them or they just had to have them are completely irresponsible. With all that said, we got chickens 11 years ago to become self sufficient. Like many are now seeing how fast it takes for the stores to be sold out of items. We were creating a good, safe and trusted source for our family.It ended with us turning it into a business and helping other families.
1 comment:
We had chickens pre-covid, and got more post-covid with the idea of being self-sufficient. Chickens are as much work and responsibility as any other animal in your care, and anyone who doesn't research proper housing, care, maintenance, etc., is as cruel as any big farm they might spout off against. We've spent a gazillion dollars on a rock solid predator-free coop, protected run, wire mesh, rubber flooring, heated water apparatus, shavings, etc., so the eggs are not cheap, but they are ours, and I know they are the freshest I can provide for my family. We work at giving our chickens the best care we possibly can, and the compact is they provide us with eggs. To your culling point, in our case, they are lucky to live here as we are vegetarians and they have care for life even after no more eggs, also part of our compact. :-) Great topic. Nicki Piersol-Freedman
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