Sunday, October 19, 2014

Life of a Chicken

In my previous post I did not say why I am observing my chickens. Well, I have a project to do for my AP English class. We have to observe something that is relatively accessible and fun to observe, that also makes us look a little more openly at the environment around us. I eventually decided to observe my chickens. They are something I usually look over, they do get plenty of attention as they regularly have problems like escaping from the pen and not being able to get back in, and providing plenty of eggs to eat. Now I give them a little more consideration and thought as to what they do within their pen.

My chickens eat their feed but so do other animals. There are always little birds that fly in during the day and eat some seed then take off as I walk out. We also regularly have quail fly in and take some food from the chickens. And even doves look for food there in the coop too. But then there is my goat Fey, which will sometimes push her way under the pens fence and eat the feed. It’s a bad move because she must then wait for me to let her out if she does this. She recently stopped when we put a thicker hog wire fence around the pen, and squeezing under became much harder.

The chickens are followers of each other. If something lands, scratches, or runs the rest trail close behind. The chickens are always looking for something to peck, whether it be themselves or the ground. I usually throw out some seed to them in the afternoons so they won’t peck each other. But they move as one all going where one other has went. If one flies up to the coops roof, the rest will try to fly up there too.

5 comments:

  1. Does your family raise these chickens to take their eggs? Or do you guys raise them to eat them? Or do you just keep them as pets? This is irrelevant, but my favorite food is fried chicken.

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    1. No we do not eat them. We have them mostly for their eggs and as pets.

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  2. I have chickens too and similarly they do the same. Mine are awfully curious and i have seen them roll in the dirt.Have you found out why they peck at each other?

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    1. I have not found out why they peck each other, but one of my friends has chickens that don't peck each other. I think it is because either the rooster picks on one of the chickens so the rest join in or it might be from having different types of chickens that don't like each other.

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  3. I used to live around chickens and my brother used to have a chicken and a rooster, I love how sometimes they all seem to have some type of synchronization and connection to each other their personalities are huge the way they do things together and flock toward the food in a group is amazing.

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