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Episode 72: Chickens with Anne Briggs, Part 2

December 8, 2017 hilary dahl
Photo courtsey of Anne Briggs

Photo courtsey of Anne Briggs

This week we continue our conversation about laying hens with guest Anne Briggs (a.k.a. Anne of All Trades). We discuss introducing new hens into your flock, building a chicken coop, and chickens in the vegetable garden. 


HOW TO LISTEN:

  • Subscribe in iTunes , Stitcher, or any of your favorite podcast players to have new episodes sent directly to your device.

  • Listen right now in your browser by clicking above.

SHOW NOTES:

In this episode, we discuss:

  • Pecking order

  • Building a coop

  • Chickens in the vegetable garden

  • Chicken manure as compost

  • Tips for chicken noise and dirt

  • Anne’s best advice for someone thinking about getting chickens or just starting out

Important Take-aways:

  • Chickens are fantastic at pest control, including hunting slugs, cabbage worms, and grubs. To minimize damage and maximize usefulness, chickens do need some management in the garden.

    • The longer they are outside, the more they will wander, so managing their garden time is important. This also helps keep them from hiding their eggs and creating a daily Easter egg hunt.

    • Make sure they are well fed before letting them out to roam the garden.

    • Chickens are great diggers and one bird can move about three yards of compost a day. To prevent chickens from digging in your garden beds, install temporary fencing and keep their wings clipped so they can’t fly over the temporary fencing.

  • Pecking order in chickens is a real thing. You never want to introduce just one bird to an established flock; you always need at least two or three, so that if there are problems, they are spread out and not all focused on one bird. The best way to go about flock introduction is to add the new birds in such a way that the flock can see the new additions but not touch them, such as using a dog crate. It’s also best to put new birds in the coop at night, so when the hens wake up, they all wake up together and they just seem to think "huh" it's always been like this.

  • Chickens can be noisy. In the absence of a rooster, sometimes hens will assume that position, and some breeds are noisier than others. Chickens can also get dirty if you don't have a proper setup. Plan ahead and invest in a good feed and watering system, think through how you'll keep their coop clean so taking care of them doesn't become a gross chore, and make sure the coop is predator-proof.

  • If you’re thinking about getting chickens, Anne says, ‘Do it! It will change your life.’

Our chickens turning our plant debris into compost!

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Elevate Chiropractic and Rehab_Encyclopedia Botanica

A huge thanks to our friends at Elevate Chiropractic and Rehab for helping to sponsor this episode! To receive a complimentary PDF of exercises you can do in the gardening off-season to help make sure your body is ready to go when spring rolls around, email getwell@elevatechiropracticrehab.com or submit a request through their website www.elevatechiropracticrehab.com


More about our special guest:

Anne Briggs_Encyclopedia Botanica Podcast Guest

Anne is a very talented woodworker, musician, farmer, and mom to a whole cast of creatures. On her suburban farm just outside of Seattle, she has 2 miniature donkeys, 3 alpacas, 2 nigerian dwarf goats, and one kinder goat (which she uses for milk), a bunny, two barn cats, a dog, 20 ducks, 4 geese, and anywhere from 20-40 chickens.

A Note From Anne: 
I'm currently in the process of writing a book chronicling my metamorphosis from a city-dwelling millennial working in a soul-crushing job in the tech industry to a full time woodworker and organic farmer. I've made some major changes in my life, my buying habits, and altered my perspective on what's important in life significantly. Five years ago, I picked up my first tool. My first woodworking project led to another and another after that. The gratification I experienced working with my hands in the woodworking shop expanded outside the garage and I convinced my husband Adam to let me get chickens. One thing led to another, and a couple years later we lived on a farm, I'd built most of the furniture we owned, and I wouldn't trade this new life for the world. 

http://www.anneofalltrades.com/
Instagram: @anneofalltrades


Featured
Hilary Dahl
Hilary Dahl

Hilary Dahl is a co-owner of Seattle Urban Farm Company and host of the Encyclopedia Botanica podcast. Since 2010 Hilary Dahl has been helping beginning and experienced growers create beautiful and productive gardens. She has the unique experience of working in on a wide range of projects, from small backyard garden plots to multi-acre vegetable farms. She also works in her own garden every day after work. Hilary is also the creator of our podcast, the Encyclopedia Botanica, which she started as a way to share effective and efficient garden management techniques, and as a way to spread her love of growing food and flowers!

Colin McCrate
Colin McCrate

Colin McCrate has been growing food organically for over 25 years. He worked on a variety of small farms in the Midwest before moving to the west coast in 2003 to teach garden-based environmental education. He founded the Seattle Urban Farm Company in 2007 with the goal of applying years of horticultural and agricultural expertise to help aspiring growers get projects off the ground or more accurately; in the ground.

Since starting Seattle Urban Farm Co in 2007, he has helped guide hundreds of urban farmers through the design, construction and management of their own edible landscape. Colin is the author of three books; Food Grown Right, In Your Backyard(Mountaineers Books, 2012) and Grow More Food (Storey Publishing, 2022); and is a garden writer for the Seattle Times.

In Podcast, Chickens Tags Encyclopedia Botanica, Podcast, backyard chickens, chickens, chicken coops, homesteading
← Episode 73: Fall Wrap-Up 2017Episode 71: Chickens with Anne Briggs, Part 1 →
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