Chickens

To Rescue a Battery Hen

Rescue-keepers offer tips and resources on helping abused commercial hens that have been “put out to pasture.”

- By Mia Mcgregor

Rescue-keepers offer tips and resources on helping abused commercial hens that have been “put out to pasture.”

Eggs may be considered nature’s perfect food, but the process of bringing a constant supply of eggs to humans is not so perfect. The continual increase in population and industrial­ization, as well as the decrease in self-sufficient living, has brought about many commercial yet less-than-ethical inventions in the food chain, one of which is battery chicken-farming.

Bruce Friedrich, executive director of The Good Food Institute, wrote about battery hens in his article “The Cruelest of All Factory Farm Products: Eggs From Caged Hens” for the Huffington Post.

“Battery cages are small wire cages where about 95% of laying hens spend their entire lives,” he wrote. “Each hen is given about 67 to 76 square inches of space (a standard sheet of paper measures 94 square inches). To get a sense of a hen’s life in a battery cage, imagine spending your entire life in a wire cage the size of your bathtub with four other people. You wouldn’t be able to move, so your muscles and bones would deteriorat­e. Your feet would become lacerated. You would go insane. That’s precisely what happens to laying hens.”

While it has existed for a while, there are people who have seen its downsides and felt the urge to help. For some, their way of helping is through rescuing hens from the egg industry and giving them a second chance at a happy, more natural life. Perhaps you can join the fight?

Battery Background

A battery farming-style of raising egg-laying hens arose in the late 1940s when researcher­s found favorable results such as improved sanitation and more uniform feeding leading to more uniform eggs and less food needed. Other benefits included higher egg production and lower mortality. Predators and temperatur­e extremes weren’t a problem, hygiene was improved, parasite infestatio­n was prevented, and diseases from outside carriers were reduced.

That “sounds” great, right? From a production and business standpoint perhaps it does, but from a chicken’s point of view, it’s not something to squawk about. The not so sunny side up of battery farming is:

In the U.S. alone, approximat­ely 83% of layer hens are kept in battery cages. In these cages, they don’t have room to stretch their wings, and to prevent their pecking each other their beak tips are seared off as chicks. They get no sunshine, dust baths, or nests to relax in and lay their eggs. This is their life for approximat­ely 18 months when their production declines, making them a financial liability to the farmer, and they get disposed of.

Although hens often take a break from laying and molt during the cold season, the egg

industry doesn’t allow this and instead uses long hours of artificial lighting to trick their bodies into laying eggs all year. Forced molting is also incorporat­ed in some operations through starving hens for up to two weeks. Although they have already been bred to lay 250 to 300 eggs per year, these techniques make them lay even more.

Common problems chickens experience from battery farming are extremely long fingernail­s and possible foot injury from the wire flooring, overgrown beaks, and metabolic conditions and eventual osteoporos­is due to the lack of exercise and constant depletion of calcium from laying so many eggs. Other health issues include reproducti­ve diseases, bone fractures and skeletal paralysis (caged layer fatigue).

Fowl Friends

Isabelle Cnudde is a chicken-rescuer. She currently has five ex-commercial hens. She is also the founder of Clorofil, a nonprofit micro-sanctuary focusing on farmed animal education and outreach where she gives classes on chicken care and promotes chicken adoption. Cnudde got involved in chicken rescue in 2014.

“After one of my chickens died, I wanted to add a couple new hens to my little flock and discovered that I could adopt chickens just like I did for my dog and cats,” she says. “This led me to Animal Place, a large farmed-animal sanctuary that rescues farmed animals including hens from the egg industry. Since 2010, they have rescued and adopted out almost 25,000 hens.”

Cnudde started volunteeri­ng and eventually going into a battery cage farm with them and has been helping with each of their rescues, focusing mostly on the medical side and rehabilita­tion prior to adoption. The biggest thing she’s learned since rescuing these chickens is how amazing they are. She says they are full of life despite the conditions they came from and finds it fascinatin­g watching them discover the world.

“You witness them grow from tiny hens with missing feathers to beautiful birds,” she says. “Their personalit­ies blossom in front of your eyes.”

Cnudde has also noticed that breed doesn’t mean much. A common breed used in the egg industry is the Leghorn. “White Leghorns are supposed to be skittish and flighty,” she says. “But in my experience, they are the most social birds I have ever had. They are also pretty smart, and I was able to teach a couple of them to peck out a specific card out of a deck of cards!”

Mary Kate Fain is a board member of Species Revolution and has been rescuing ex-battery hens for over a year. She currently cares for one hen named Angie. The others she’s rescued (17 in the past year) have been rehomed at local sanctuarie­s — such as Chenoa Manor and Rancho Relaxo — or adopted by other rescuers. Spending time with chickens has changed her perception of them, and the biggest thing she’s learned since rescuing hens is how unique each one of them really is. She’s noticed that each hen has its own personalit­y, quirks, likes and dislikes.

“Angie, for example, is incredibly stubborn and wants nothing more than a high perch at night and a warm sunny spot during the day,” Fain says. “And she will do anything to get this. The first night we rescued her, she and [another hen we rescued] Coretta were being kept in my spare bathtub while they were healing. Despite the fact that she had never had the room to even flap her wings before, Angie immediatel­y started jumping over the netting we had set up to perch on my hairbrush on the bathroom counter. Her ability to fight for her needs, and drive to do so even after years of trauma, is amazing to me.”

Adoption Agencies

One easy way to find chickens to adopt is to get in touch with battery hen rescue groups. A quick online search reveals plenty of results. Some people rescue their chickens by contacting organizati­ons. Others rescue theirs directly from the farm or a live poultry market or slaughterh­ouse. Some hens are even rescued after falling off trucks headed towards the slaughterh­ouse or after simply being abandoned somewhere.

Battery Cage Hen Rescue USA posts rescue opportunit­ies in the U.S. on its Facebook page. There are also organizati­ons or sanctuarie­s such as Animal Place, mentioned earlier, where you can apply to adopt chickens and other animals. United Poultry Concerns has a list of farmed animal sanctuarie­s in the U.S. and worldwide. Get in touch with rescue organizati­ons, online groups or pages, or local farms for more informatio­n. See our “Rescue Resources” sidebar on this page for contact info.

Tips for Aspiring Rescuers

Jesse Argent is a battery hen rescuer in Australia and has a battery hen rescue page on Facebook. In one of his posts, he shares a plethora of good info for people considerin­g rehoming some battery hens. Here is a condensed version of some of his points from a past Facebook post for people interested in getting involved in his chicken rescue:

• The birds are missing a lot of feathers

mostly from their necks, undersides and tails. Because of this, they can burn quite easily in the sun when free-ranging at their new home so they require a fair amount of shade until their feathers grow back.

• The birds have not been on any other type

of flooring besides the bottom of a wire cage so they have extremely long nails. They will not be used to walking on other surfaces right away.

• The birds did not have nesting boxes and

therefore will drop their eggs wherever they feel for the first few months.

They are some of the most amazing characters and overall great birds to own. They need a little more TLC at the start while they learn how everything works, but once they are settled in then they can become the best pets you’ve ever owned.

Fain’s tip for people interested in rescuing battery chickens is to make sure your are doing it with the hen’s best interests at heart, and not just for free eggs. Rescuing chickens

is challengin­g, but the reward of doing so is much greater than a couple eggs could ever be,” she says.

She also mentions that ex-battery hens will inevitably have some health issues — respirator­y, reproducti­ve, injuries and infections — and need veterinary care. Finding a qualified vet should be top priority, she says, noting that depending on the hen’s issues, you might have vet bills totaling up to $1,000, as well as ongoing costs. She recommends calling different animal hospitals or asking around online in order to find a good avian vet with chicken experience.

Cnudde has feeding advice for rescued chickens. “All battery hens are de-beaked, which means that part of their beaks were cut off to avoid them hurting each other in the small cages they live in,” she says. “It is something you can easily deal with by providing a deep dish and crumbles — instead of pellets — and cutting some of their treats in smaller pieces.

“They look a bit scruffy at first as they broke their feathers rubbing against the cages, but after a first molt they become all beautiful. [They also will] have a shorter lifespan than heritage breeds. We bred them to lay so many eggs that they will most probably die from some reproducti­ve issue.”

According to Alexander Craig, media and communicat­ions manager at the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals‎, birds — including egg-laying hens — are the animals most urgently in need of protection. He shares that some states are banning battery cages, and more than 100 retailers and companies have set policies to go cage-free.

The ASPCA’S Shop With Your Heart pledge asks people to choose more plant-based foods and alternativ­es or animal products with certificat­ions such as Animal Welfare Approved, Certified Humane and Global Animal Partnershi­p Steps 2+. Another option is just raising your own chickens.

We may never know for sure what came first — the chicken or the egg — but the love of chickens is something we all have in common. Consider helping out some ex-battery chickens this year and enjoy watching them transform into full-feathered beauties.

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 ??  ?? This owner made a vest for her former battery hen while her feathers grew back in.
This owner made a vest for her former battery hen while her feathers grew back in.
 ??  ?? Former battery hens’ feathers start to grow back in at their new forever homes.
Former battery hens’ feathers start to grow back in at their new forever homes.
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 ??  ?? Many rescue organizati­ons adopt out former battery hens, so they can live out their lives in happier situations.
Many rescue organizati­ons adopt out former battery hens, so they can live out their lives in happier situations.
 ??  ?? Itchy was re-homed through a battery hen welfare trust. She decided to retire from laying eggs after having to produce two eggs per day for about 17 months in the battery in a cage the size of an A4 sheet of paper. This is her when she first arrived at her new home (left) and then a few months later (above).
Itchy was re-homed through a battery hen welfare trust. She decided to retire from laying eggs after having to produce two eggs per day for about 17 months in the battery in a cage the size of an A4 sheet of paper. This is her when she first arrived at her new home (left) and then a few months later (above).
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