Green meter: dark green
Raising a small flock of chickens in your backyard is a excellent way of creating a more sustainable atmosphere for your family. Chickens are excellent pets, require minimal care, and are relatively inexpensive to purchase and care for. And in turn, chickens provide you with a rich, healthy source of food: eggs!
To answer that lingering question that always pops up: NO, you do not need a rooster to produce edible eggs. You do need a rooster to produce fertilized eggs and in turn raise a flock from hatchings. Hens lay approximately 4 to 5 eggs per week (about one egg every day and a half on average) in healthy conditions. Our flock of seven hens give us approximately a half-dozen eggs per day in optimal conditions; on average, they lay a little over three dozen eggs per week.
Chickens support sustainable living not only by producing backyard food, but also reduce your overall waste by consuming table scraps. We supplement our small flock with any and all non-compostable table scraps, along with a fair helping of compostable table scraps; in short, we give them just about all of our scraps that do not contain meat. Chickens are little scavengers, eating just about anything they scratch out of the ground.
Chickens also provide an excellent source of nitrogen-rich compostable waste. We use a pine bedding for our girls and change it out twice-monthly. We then compost the bedding material along with all the waste they leave behind. This breaks down quickly and provides me with an excellent fertilizer for both my vegetable garden and landscaping plants. Additionally, I will shovel out the areas around their run for rich, black, nitrogen-rich soil that they kick out of the fence while scratching.
By maintaining a small vegetable garden and raising a small flock of chickens, it is easily feasable to serve several meals per week only from your garden! Not only does this help trim the grocery bill, but it is also an excellent way to practice sustainable living!





Welcome to GOLO, where WRAL.com visitors can comment on stories and create profile pages, blogs and photo galleries.
You must be a registered WRAL.com user to use these tools. Click here to register or log in.
August 5, 2008 11:28 a.m.
July 31, 2008 12:37 p.m.
GOLO member since August 27, 2007
July 30, 2008 3:27 p.m.
Stories are open for comments between 7am and 10pm Monday through Friday, but GOLO is always open. Sound off on community issues, create your own blog, upload and share image galleries and make new friends in GOLO!