My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
07-12-21-SWS
ArdenHills
>
Administration
>
City Council
>
City Council Packets
>
2020-2029
>
2021
>
07-12-21-SWS
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
7/8/2021 4:28:53 PM
Creation date
7/8/2021 4:28:38 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
General
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
22
PDF
View images
View plain text
chickenrunrescue.org Page 5 9/14/15 <br /> <br />ARRIVAL <br />If other birds are already present, a 2 week quarantine in a separate area is recommended to watch for <br />signs of illness and parasites. Avoid noisy, high traffic areas and allow the bird to acclimate before <br />introducing to other birds, animals and family. <br /> <br /> <br />PROVIDING A GOOD HOME <br />NATURAL HISTORY <br />It is important to understand how chickens live in the wild and to provide them with an environment <br />that meets those instinctive physical and psychological needs as closely as possible. Chickens are all <br />descended from Tropical Jungle Fowl are adapted to living in a natural habitat that is spacious, richly <br />vegetated, diverse and warm. This presents a particular challenge in a small urban setting in a cold <br />climate like Minnesota. <br /> <br />Flocks have a highly developed social structure and depend on each for companionship and security. <br />Naturalists have observed that they can recognize and remember 180 other individual flock members. <br />They are ground dwelling birds. Most are capable of low flight in short distances, smaller birds can fly <br />higher and farther. <br /> <br />In the wild they roost in trees at dusk before they sleep or to escape predators. They hide their nests in <br />cavities in the ground. The majority of their waking hours are spent active, wide ranging, grazing, <br />foraging for food-‐ plants, bugs and occasionally small rodents. In their natural state. They typically travel <br />1/2 mile from their roost each day. In the wild, they are never over crowded-‐ if the population becomes <br />to dense, members will break off into subgroups and spread out. They move on from one area to <br />another which allows food sources to regenerate and their waste is not concentrated in one place and it <br />can decompose without health risk to the flock. <br /> <br />Roosters alert the flock to danger, find food and call the hens to it and stand guard as they eat. They <br />select and build nests and will even participate in caring for the young. They also act as peace keepers to <br />intervene in disputes that can develop between flock members. Roosters will start to crow and display <br />courting behaviors at about 6 months of age. It is essential to gently handle a rooster on a daily basis to <br />establish that you are the flock leader (Alpha) and maintain a well socialized companion. <br /> <br />The hens spend their time scratching for food, dust bathing, preening, playing and napping. Hens begin <br />to lay eggs at about 6 months of age. Hen in the wild produce only a few clutches of eggs a year for the <br />sole purpose of reproduction. Domesticated hens have been bred to lay one egg a day but by 18 month <br />of age, egg laying frequency generally diminishes and many adult or senior hens stop laying altogether. <br /> <br />Chickens are sociable, cheerful and intelligent creatures who can form lifelong bonds with each other <br />and other species including humans, dogs and cats. Because of their keen intelligence and instinctive <br />physical activity, they need a stimulating environment that mimics as much as possible the rich and <br />diverse world nature designed them to enjoy. <br /> <br /> <br />COOP, PEN, RANGE/ EXERCISE YARD <br />“Housing and infrastructure. The primary purpose of poultry housing is to protect flocks against adverse <br />weather and predators (coyote, fox, stray dogs, raccoons and raptors). Weather is of critical concern in <br />the Upper Midwest, where summers can be extremely hot and winters bitterly cold. Housing must <br />provide shade from sun and cover from rain. It must be able to withstand high winds and snow loads if it <br />is to be used for year-‐round operation. These basic housing considerations apply to all poultry”
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).