Keeping
Chickens: How To Keep Chickens at
Home
Learning How to Keep Chickens at Home is a Great 1st step to Becoming
More Eco- Friendly
Learning how to keep chickens at home and managing your
own flock of free range egg laying hens is an enjoyable and rewarding pastime. Hens can be kept in even
the smallest of spaces as long as they have suitable shelter, a ready supply of food and small patch of ground
to scratch around in. Hens can easily be bought as chicks from local farmers and smallholders. They will
produce one egg per day per hen so even a couple of good layers will produce more than enough eggs for a
family. They are easy to keep and feed and as long as you don't add a cockerel to the flock you wont get any
complaints from the neighbours either! In no time at all the hens will become very tame and make entertaining
pets as well as being a useful source of fresh eggs. If you have never considered learning how to keep
chickens at home, there's never been a better time to start.
Hens should be given a
roosting shelter in the form of a well constructed chicken coop. This will need to keep them warm and dry and
protect them from predators at night and also provide some roosting boxes in which to lay their eggs. When
constructing the chicken coop, make sure that it is easy for you to gain access to for cleaning and collecting
the eggs. The coop can be attached to or placed inside a small pen in an unused corner of the garden. Give your
hens as much space as you can spare them. The more space, the happier and healthier your hens will be. Your new
hens should be fed with proprietary 'layers pellets'. These will ensure that they get all the nutrients they
need to thrive and produce a regular supply of quality eggs. You can also supplement their diet with food waste
from the kitchen but remember that what your feeding your hens is ultimately what you are feeding yourself as
you will be eating the eggs!
Make sure that your chickens have a supply of fresh water available at all times. On a warm day
a chicken can dehydrate very quickly and this can often prove fatal. Make sure that the container you provide
the water in can't be easily knocked over as they will often perch on the side of the vessel to take a
drink.

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