Archive for the ‘Chicken’ Category

Gardening with Chickens

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

Josh and I  love to work in the big garden at the farm- 33 tomato plants plus squash, asparagus, zucchini, chard, peas, and more. But on our last trip out to the garden, we found our squash plants were getting decimated by squash bugs. So we set loose five chickens in the garden for the day and those ladies had quite the feast!

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New Chickens to the Rescue

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Close Up Demand for our free-range eggs has resulted in the Great Egg Shortage of 2010, but not to fear, we just purchased an additional 100 laying hens. The new chickens will be producing their hearts out within a month. Thanks for sticking with us through this trying time – eggs are on the way!

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New Record Egg

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

Some of the chickens have been giving out extremely big eggs! We get one or two extra large eggs a day, and a giant egg about once a week. Today we got a new record. Our eggs average about 55mm long and 35mm wide. Today’s record egg is 73mm long and 54mm wide. We will keep you posted if and when this record gets broken.

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Chicken Salad

Thursday, January 28th, 2010
Chickens eating cress

There is nothing like the lack of sunshine to make you appreciate the fact that sunshine is what we are really selling here at Broadview. Just before Christmas we got a 21″ snow, and then a spell of frigid weather that kept the ground covered for weeks. While we still let the chickens out to play during the day, we found that they do not like snow higher than their heads. The snow covered up all the grass for weeks, and the grass is the vector we use to get the sunshine into the chickens. I noticed that the egg yolks were starting to turn lighter yellow, like grocery store eggs. I started to look around for something green to feed the hens so I could get some sunshine back in those eggs. I found what I was looking for literally in my own back yard. The spring fed stream that flows out of my yard was full of succulent green watercress. A few minutes with a rake yielded a 5-gallon bucket full of sunshine in the form cress, grass and duckweed kept green and growing by the relative warmth of the spring water. I spread the fresh green salad over the snow and the chickens went after it like crazy.

They ate it all, leaves, stem and roots in just a few hours. Over the remainder of the cold snap we took several buckets of sunshine to the chickens until the snow melted and the chickens could once again forage for their greens themselves. They are calling for snow this weekend, and we will do our best to keep that solar energy flowing even if it means redefining the term “Chicken salad”.

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