Lay egg in coop?
No. Coop is for commoners.
Lay egg in flower box?
Yes. Fashionable, daring.
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom

seen from China
seen from China

seen from Sweden
seen from Germany
seen from France

seen from France

seen from Australia

seen from France

seen from United States
seen from France

seen from Malaysia

seen from France

seen from United Kingdom
Lay egg in coop?
No. Coop is for commoners.
Lay egg in flower box?
Yes. Fashionable, daring.
I'd always been told that backyard eggs are a very environmentally friendly source of food, but I just did some calculating and the feed brand we buy requires feeding around 125g a day (consists mainly of grains, I used wheat for my maths since that's the first ingredient), which is around 400 calories a day. A chicken laying 200 eggs a year would give around 40 calories in egg a day. You're literally reducing your caloric output tenfold by filtering food through a chicken's body?? Insane!
Environmentally friendly is sort of a relative term. If you’re comparing backyard eggs to store bought beef, then it is comparatively environmentally friendly. If you’re comparing raising your own chickens to growing your own tomatoes, then it probably isn’t.
How sustainable backyard eggs are depends on a lot of factors, what feed you're using, where you're getting it, whether they're foraging etc. but in general terms, it will be more sustainable and more calorie efficient to eat a crop directly, than to feed it to an animal and then consume what that animal produces using those calories. No animal produces in food more calories than they take in. This just makes intuitive sense even without the statistics.
There is an exception to that if we're talking about crops that aren't edible for humans, but even then, there is the water and land cost, and the opportunity cost of not growing crops for human consumption on that same arable land. Most animal products quite literally detract from the global food supply, but that isn't always the case with backyard hens.
A hen who is left to forage and/or fed on grain that you grow yourself will have a lower footprint than a hen who is fed on store bought grain, but I don't imagine it would be as sustainable or efficient as eating crops directly even in that scenario. I'd need to see more data to be confident about that though, that is just my educated guess, as I can't find much comparative analysis on it.
packed a little gift, courtesy of the Ladies!!!!
Frog HATES the paparazzi (me) taking photos of her and her wife
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 I missed the first part where Polly and Pinecone ran for the door and went - NOPE! FUCK THAT! LOL I wish I would've caught that on camera. Coraline and Daisy (the two Polish hens) never even bothered.
@vera-king-hrfl they're all whole mood for today 🤣
Our new rooster meets the ladies.
This was always going to be interesting. This lovely boy is a rescue. Apparently, he didn't get along with another rooster at his original place. (He's incredibly vocal and VERY loud, so we suspect that may have been a factor 😂 - he wouldn't have been a good fit in an urban setting.)
Anyway, he's been in quarantine since he arrived because avian flu is still a risk here. He's a pure-bred Black Copper Marans and our plan is to put him with our two Marans girls, who basically ignored him. The White Leghorns & the Cheshires were far more interested, although I suspect they just don't want to share their food.
We wanted a Scots name for him (the one we lost to the weasel was Donald), and we ended up with Malcolm. Maybe, in hindsight, it should be Dougal. He seems to be telling us "Just call me Dougal" every few minutes...
The funniest part of having a house chicken is working on something and you hear demon gurgling right behind you like a cheap horror movie.
🌭🥚 Sausage n' Eggs!
Sticker Club #1: March 2023 bonus sticker!
Here's the finished sticker design as thanks for our first montly goal met: 100 pounds of chicken feed! It's our Jill, Paprika, and a couple of Paprika's tan eggs. But who was fertilizing them?!