Acres Down Farm Shop

View Original

Eggs-cellent we have chooks back on the farm!

Keeping chickens is fun and rewarding. The rewards are great tasting eggs, which when you see the number of eggs a chicken can produce they do cover their cost.

Fun is watching the antics of your poultry as they search around their enclosure, cleaning up all the bugs, slugs and insects.

And don't forget chickens are no different to any other animal if you spend time with them they will be just as interested in you as you with them.

We have had our new flock at the farm for just over 6 months now. We got the birds at 10 – 12 weeks old. So had a little time to wait for them to become “point of lay” birds – due to the Covid 19 pandemic, we were finding it really hard to source our new flock, as POL birds were nearly as rare as toilet roll and bread flour!!

Meet our ladies:

Our handsome cockerel

Friends of ours keep hens too and they have over the years reared a few chicks from ½ dozen fertilized eggs via the postie.  The only issue here is that you have no control on the outcome of the sex of the chicks.  In one batch of eggs ordered via the post, our friends ended up with 6 boys!!

Though boys are a lovely addition to any flock, with their wonderful shimmering coloured feathers and curling tails, these lads however lack the ability to lay an egg!!  For the first chapter of their lives, these 6 boys were looked after by our friend’s grandchildren. Though, as time passed and they matured, when all 6 lads went into competition on who would be the loudest cockerel at the start of the day it all got a bit too much for the whole family and their neighbours. So an emergency SOS went out to find new homes.  So Lord Leonard Snowy 1st arrived at the farm at the same time as our new ladies.

Whether you want to breed or not – a cockerel is a very useful guy to have around and Lord Leonard takes his role very seriously. He is a very gallant gentleman, he protects his ladies, alerting them to predators (as you know we have had problems with both foxes and Goshawks), he corrals them safely back up into the hen house every evening.  He acts as the peace keeper –he has been seen to intervene when his ladies get too “clucky” or are too busy minding their fellow mate’s business and there is something quintessentially enchanting about a farmyard scene with a flamboyant feathered chap making his grand announcement each and every day that morning is here!

Lord Leonard Snowy 1st is now at his forever home at Acres Down Farm – he adds a little razzle dazzle to the flock, whilst he struts his stuff

Cock - a – doodle – do!!!