Chickens

Blissful Birds

No one likes to sit around the coop all day doing nothing; keep your birds busy with these fun activities.

- by Audrey Pavia

No one likes to sit around the coop all day doing nothing; keep your birds busy with these fun activities.

B oredom and chickens are not a good combinatio­n. When hens have nothing to do, they create their own fun. And their idea of fun means

picking on other hens, pulling out their own feathers and eating their eggs before you have a chance to harvest them.

Free-ranging chickens rarely get bored because they have lots of opportunit­ies to explore their surroundin­gs. Cooped chickens are another story. With nothing but their coop walls and each other to keep them amused, confined chickens get into trouble.

If the situation dictates that you keep your chickens in a coop instead of allowing them to free-range, you can still do a lot to help keep them from going stir crazy. Providing an enriching environmen­t along with some changes in their routine can turn your bored flock into a bunch of happy hens.

Lifestyle Changes

One of your first considerat­ions for creating a more stimulatin­g existence for your cooped chickens is making some changes in their lifestyle. This means changing the way they live on a daily basis. Here are some suggestion­s.

• add a rooster. If you have a flock of hens without a rooster, you have no idea the fun you — and your hens — are missing. Adding a rooster to your coop will change the dynamics of the group in a big way. The rooster will make your hens’ lives more interestin­g by adding mating to their daily activities, and his presence will also create a more natural environmen­t for your girls. In the world of chickens, boys and girls are meant to live together.

Some of the other benefits of having a rooster in the coop include watching him court the hens with something known as the shuffle dance; seeing him carry the best morsels of food over to his favorite hen and drop them in front of her; having him break up fights between hens; and seeing him help protect new chicks in the flock.

HANDLE YOUR BIRDS. If your chickens are young, or if they are mature but were handled a lot when young, you can help make their lives more interestin­g by regularly holding them. Spend some time sitting in the coop with a hen in your lap, stroking her feathers.

It’s therapeuti­c for you (it can lower blood pressure and reduce stress), and your birds will enjoy it.

If you have older birds that have not been handled a lot, you’ll need to spend some time getting them used to human touch. Keep handling sessions calm and short, and give the bird time to relax and settle down before you end the session. Over time, your hens will discover that time spent being petting and talked to is actually something rather pleasant.

PROVIDE MORE ROOM.

One reason free-ranging chickens are relatively free from boredom is because they have plenty of room to roam. Having a large space to explore keeps chickens occupied.

While being confined to a coop is safer for domestic chickens, the lack of freedom can prove frustratin­g for busy birds. You can help remedy this in one of several ways. First, consider supervised free-ranging. If you are concerned about predators attacking your hens if they are outside their

coop, give them an hour a day to free-range on your property as you sit outside with them to keep watch. Make sure you can successful­ly herd them back into the coop when you can no longer babysit them. Or you can wait until the end of the day, about an hour before dusk, to let them roam. They will naturally go back to the coop when the sun starts to go down.

Another way to provide your birds with more room is to extend their outdoor enclosure. Take a look at your coop and see if there is a way you can add on to it to allow more outdoor space. You can build an extension onto your current pen or provide a separate outdoor enclosure where your chickens can lounge during the day. Be sure to provide them with shade and roosts in this enclosure.

Portable enclosures designed to allow chickens to graze on grass are another option for giving your birds more room. These small enclosures have an open bottom, and when placed on a lawn, the birds are directly on the grass. Chickens love to snack on the green blades and will root around for bugs, too, while they peck away at the grass.

After 15 minutes in one spot, you can easily move the pen just a few feet to provide the chickens with a new patch of grass. (If you choose this option, make sure your lawn is free of herbicides and pesticides for your chickens’ safety.)

Coop Enrichment

You can also do a lot to liven up your birds’ environmen­t by adding accouterme­nts to their coop. Creating a space that is rich with stimulatin­g toys, perches, roosts and other items can help give your hens something to do.

Start by adding some permanent fixtures to your coop. Chickens love to get up off the ground, and anything you can add to their enclosure that will enable them to perch or roost will be appreciate­d. Here are some ideas:

• Perches. Construct perches where your chickens can hang out above ground. You can use dried tree branches, commercial­ly made free-standing perches or even an old wooden chair. A small, dead tree with sturdy branches can even work. Just make sure the base of the tree is secured in a pot with heavy rocks or cement so the tree won’t tip over when your birds are perched in it.

• swings. Some chickens love to perch on swings. You can buy swings made specifical­ly for chickens that can be hung from the coop ceiling, or if you are handy, you can make one yourself. Some chicken swings are decorated with colorful beads or bells to help entertain swinging chickens.

• Ladders. It’s no secret that chickens like to climb up on things, and what better way to provide that option than with a ladder? Flexible ladders made for chickens can stretch across the coop horizontal­ly like a swing, while firm, vertical ladders can lead up to a roost or just lean against a coop wall. Chickens will enjoy climbing on them and roosting on the rungs.

• Tree STUMPS. Chickens enjoy sitting on tree stumps, so adding a few cut stumps to your coop will go a long way toward making your birds happy. You can use a few stumps of graduating size or bases that are all the same height. Place them next to each other in the coop so the birds can jump from one to another, or place them around away from each other to allow individual roosting. You can even hollow out one of the stumps, turn it on its side, and use it as a chicken tunnel and hideout.

• straw Bales. If your chicken coop is big enough, add a bale of fresh straw to the floor plan, still held together with baling twine. Your girls will enjoy jumping up on it and scratching around. They may also peck through it looking for bugs, and if you toss scratch on it, they will root around between the strands of straw searching out the grain.

• Leaf PILES. If you have a tree that regularly drops its foliage, you can add an armful of dried leaves you’ve raked up to a corner of your coop. Your chickens will love rustling through the pile looking for bugs and scattering the leaves around.

• dust BATHS. Chickens love nothing better than taking a bath in the dirt. If your coop floor isn’t already made of the kind of dirt the birds can bath in (soft and fine), you can add a spare tire minus the rim or a large, shallow pan filled with fine sand or dirt. You can also add some fine food-grade diatomaceo­us earth to help kill any mites or fleas that might be living on your chickens. Place the dust bath inside your coop and watch your birds have fun fluttering around in it.

• Toys.

Dogs and cats are known for liking toys, but chickens appreciate them, too! Mirrors are popular toys for chickens, which enjoy pecking at their own image. Toys that dispense treats when rolled around are another chicken favorite; you can use toys made for small dogs or specifical­ly for chickens. Plastic balls containing bells are also popular with some birds, who enjoy pecking at them, and picking up and dropping them.

Fun with Food

In their natural habitat, chickens are grazers and are always looking for something to eat. You can help make your birds’ lives more interestin­g by giving them a challenge when it comes to getting their food.

• VARIETY. One method of livening things up for your hens is to provide them with plenty of variety in their diet. While lay pellets or allflock crumble are great staples to make sure your chickens are getting all the nutrients they need, giving them other goodies will make life more interestin­g. • LIVE Insects. Chickens enjoy catching their food, and while an occasional bug may wander into your coop, your birds don’t likely have much opportunit­y to chase down insects for dinner. This is where you come in. You can buy live

insects for your chickens to eat from your local pet-supply store or online. Some favorites include waxworms, mealworms and crickets. Toss a few of these critters into your coop and watch your chickens scramble!

• fresh food. Regularly offering your chickens fresh food will help keep them from getting bored. It’s a rare hen that will turn down a juicy piece of fruit. Strawberri­es, blueberrie­s, watermelon and apple slices are popular with many birds. Chickens love greens, too, so tossing them some spinach, arugula, kale, lettuce and chard will make them happy. Remember that whatever treats you feed, give them in moderation. You don’t want to upset your birds’ digestive tracts. Also be sure to wash all fruits and vegetables before you feed them.

Keeping cooped chickens entertaine­d takes a little effort, but you’ll find that it’s worth the trouble. Not only will your hens be less destructiv­e and maybe even more productive, they will certainly be happier. You might even find that you are enjoying them more, too.

Audrey Pavia is a freelance writer and author of more than 20 books about animals. She shares her home in Norco, California, with two horses, two dogs, two cats and a flock of bantams.

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 ??  ?? Spread a little scratch on the ground to get your gals searching and pecking.
Spread a little scratch on the ground to get your gals searching and pecking.
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Hold your birds from day 1, so they’ll get used to human touch.
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If you can’t free-range your birds, build or buy a movable chicken tractor to allow them to still get out on some grass from time to time.
 ??  ?? A chicken coop should include different ways for birds to interact and move about.
A chicken coop should include different ways for birds to interact and move about.
 ??  ?? Add a tire to the coop or run for a fun place for birds to sit and mingle.
Add a tire to the coop or run for a fun place for birds to sit and mingle.

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