Backyard Chickens Have Unfair Reputation

A photo of the Chicken WhispererTime and time again I hear people complaining about the problems they think backyard chickens will bring if allowed into the backyards of their city. Some of the more common complaints that I hear are noise, smell, rodents, disease and property value. I would like to address each and every one of these complaints one by one.

I don’t think I've ever been to a meeting about keeping backyard chickens where the noise issue has not been brought up at least once. I often hear people complaining about the potential early morning crow of a nearby rooster. This is a very valid point, and I too would be complaining if a rooster were waking me up every morning at 4:30am, especially if I did not have to wake up until 7:00am or later. There are many advantages of keeping backyard chickens, but most urban chicken keepers want to keep backyard chickens for the benefits of having an endless supply of farm fresh eggs. Solution? You do not need a rooster to enjoy farm fresh eggs every morning. In fact, hens will lay better if there is no rooster around to disturb their routine. Roosters primarily have two jobs, which they do very well. They protect and fertilize. You only need a rooster if you want baby chicks running around in the backyard. I still hate to see cities ban roosters all together because there are ways to keep roosters in an urban area quietly and responsibly. I plan to share how this can be done at a later date.

Smell is another complaint that is often brought up when discussing chickens. Yes, chickens can smell just like dogs, cats, rabbits, hamsters, gerbils and even people, if not taken care of properly. We are not talking about a 300-foot commercial chicken house with 30,000 chickens next door. We are talking about six to twelve laying hens in a backyard setting. There are many ways to reduce the smell of your chicken coop and I will share how this can be done at a later date.

If you don’t think that you have mice and rats outside your home right now, you are living in a fantasy world. Many claim that keeping chickens will attract mice and rats and think they don’t exist until the chickens arrive. One client of mine who is entertaining the idea of getting some backyard chickens lives in the most affluent city in Georgia. She told me that her cat leaves her little "presents" at the back door almost every day. These "presents" just happen to be mice and rats. She also said that she has seen mice and rats run across her backyard and up a honeysuckle vine to get over the fence and into her neighbor’s yard. Yes, if you have chickens there will be another food source in your backyard, but there are ways to keep the chicken feed put away in mice and rat proof containers. I will share how this can be done at a later date.

About three years ago many were asking questions about the risks of avian influenza and keeping backyard chickens. I would always refer them to the Center for Disease Control (CDC) website where it addresses this issue. On the Q&A page the following is posted. Question: We have a small flock of chickens. Is it safe to keep them? Answer: In the United States there is no need at present to remove a flock of chickens because of concerns regarding avian influenza. The U.S. Department of Agriculture monitors potential infection of poultry and poultry products by avian influenza viruses and other infectious disease agents. Enough said!

Many people who oppose the keeping of backyard chickens often sound off during meetings about decreased property values if the city allows the keeping of backyard chickens. All I can say is show me the proof. No one has ever shown up at a backyard chicken meeting that I have ever attended with any valid proof that someone got $10,000 less for their home because a resident in their city keeps backyard chickens.

To put backyard chickens into perspective I often tell people the following. On any given day I have more dog poop in my front yard from other neighbor’s dogs then they have chicken poop in their front yard from my chickens. I have more cat prints on my car from other neighbor’s cats then they have chicken prints on their car from my chickens. And I’m awakened at 2:00am more from other neighbor’s dogs barking then they have ever been awakened at 2:00am from my sleeping hens.

Keeping backyard chickens can be a fun and rewarding experience. If you would like to learn more about keeping backyard poultry I invite you to listen to the Backyard Poultry with the Chicken Whisperer radio show Monday through Friday at 12:00pm Eastern at www.blogtalkradio.com/backyardpoultry and on Saturday at 9:00am EST at www.americaswebradio.com.

The Reign of the Scarecrow

Traditional scarecrowThey stand vigil throughout our town this time of year, and can be seen doing the same in small towns, yards, and yes, even in cornfields all across America.  The scarecrow, one of the most familiar figures in farming communities here in the United States and in many other parts of the world, is also a traditional symbol of the harvest season.

Scarecrow festivals featuring scarecrow-making demonstrations and contests crop up nearly everywhere in autumn.  I love the autumn, and I welcome all it has to offer, including those pumpkin-headed, raggedy-clad men of the field, but I’ve always thought it seems kind of odd that scarecrows are put up as autumn decorations, when now would be the time that their work for the year is done. 

I’ve never read of such a ritual, but can imagine a long-ago summer solstice celebration honoring the scarecrow.  The townspeople would gather and spend the day joyously constructing these revered protectors of the crop.  At dusk, the figures would solemnly be erected as seasonal guardians over their fields, after which much feasting and celebrating would continue by firelight well into the night – for this is the time when a scarecrow’s work starts and he has a long, hard job ahead of him.  Scarecrow festivals at the start of summer make more sense to me than in autumn.  Putting up scarecrows in fall seems a backward way of doing things.             

But who am I to argue with technicalities?  I like scarecrows as much as the next person.  Last October, driving home from vacationing up north, we passed through a small town that seemed to be inhabited entirely by scarecrows – every home, every business we drove by had a scarecrow keeping watch outside.  I pressed my nose up against the car window just like a kid, trying to get a glimpse of each one.

In our own town, South Haven, a Parade of Scarecrows is part of our month long Harvest Moon Festival.  The merchants downtown erect scarecrows outside their storefronts, and they are judged in different categories:  most original, scariest, judges’ choice, people’s choice, and best representation of the business which made it.  My favorite last year was The Raven, in human-sized form and dressed as Edgar Allen Poe himself.

Poe's Raven 

Using a raven, cousin to the crow, to scare the crows?  Although this particular raven was far too well-dressed to get to the down and dirty job of keeping the crows out of the fields, it’s not the first bird to be used as a scarecrow, real or fictional.  The Senecas, a Native American tribe in what is now New York, fed corn soaked in a mixture of herbs to crows.  The herbal mixture was a poison that caused the crows to fly erratically through the fields, thus scaring away other birds.  In southern Appalachia, it was a common practice to hang dead crows from poles to frighten other crows.  A similar method was used in the fictional work Robinson Crusoe.  Crusoe hangs dead crows in his patch of corn in order to frighten away other birds daring to enter the area.  It worked, “…I could never see a bird near the place as long as my scarecrows hung there."  This, though not the modern idea of a scarecrow, is thought by some to be probably the first time the word “scarecrow” appeared in literature. Robinson Crusoe was written in 1719. 

Scarecrows, or whatever the term used, appeared long before 1719.  Scarecrows have been a historical figure of the crops for thousands of years.  Since the first crop was planted, man has been trying to thwart the efforts of birds and animals from destroying it.  Ancient Egyptians used net-covered wooden frames to keep quail out of their fields.  In Japan, the putrid scent of burning bamboo poles hung with rags, meat or fish bones kept birds and animals out of the rice fields; the Japanese called these scarecrows “Kakashis” which translates into “something that smells badly.” 

In Ancient Greece, Priapus was a god of fertility, horticulture, and viticulture.  He was deformed by what some texts politely refer to as a grotesquely large “club,” and because GRIT is a nice, family-oriented publication, I will leave it at that. Statues honoring him were erected throughout Greece, not only in temples, but in the countryside where his large deformity served not only a symbol of the fields’ fertility, but as a method to scare the birds, animals and would-be thieves.

Ancient cultures often attributed things they did not understand to gods or spirits.  Offerings and symbols were used as a way to appease these gods.  Like the statues honoring Priapus, these symbols often were representations of the gods themselves, or had magical powers.  Farmers used these early “scarecrows” in their fields in hopes the gods would bestow upon them a good crop.  In Japanese mythology, the deity Kuebiko is a scarecrow who knows and sees everything.  In Germany during the Middle Ages, scarecrows were made in the form of witches, who would draw to them the evil spirits of winter.  Once the witch devoured winter, it was safe for spring to arrive.  Figures such as these slowly evolved into the scarecrows we are familiar with.   

The medieval British used live boys as “crow scarers,” a tactic also used by Native Americans and early American settlers.  But the Plague killed half the population of Britain making “crow scarers” scarce, and as the colonies in America became more populated, the need for grain increased, and it wasn’t feasible for farmers to be out in the fields all day shooing away the birds.  Straw-stuffed sacks with gourd or turnip heads were erected on poles to take the place of live bird shooers. 

The bogeywife of oldThe German immigrants in Pennsylvania had a nice idea.  They gave their scarecrows, which they called “blootzamon” or bogyman, a mate to keep him company during his long days out in the field – although the “bootzafrau” or bogeywife most often stood on the other side of the field.

Sometime in the mid-1800s, scarecrows began to be used not only for the utilitarian purpose of protecting crops, but also purely for decoration.  More than just a crude sack filled with straw, they became a type of folk art form.  Each with its own unique personality, these are the scarecrows of autumn festivals, such as the Parade of Scarecrows in our town.

Our downtown scarecrows were not your typical Wizard of Oz–type scarecrows.  The hardware store’s was made from a rake, tools and barbeque grill parts. A restaurant had a mannequin dressed in a 50s style waitress uniform. She was quite pretty in a quirky sort of way, but badly needed to shave her legs – she had straw-hair sticking through her stockings. The macabre was well represented.  The same boutique that did Poe’s Raven last year went with the literary Halloween-type scarecrow again this year in the form of Washington Irving’s Headless Horseman.

Headless Horseman

The hair salon where I get my hair cut used a mannequin hair-stylist holding giant scissors, hovering over another mannequin sitting in a barber’s chair.  This “customer’s” head lay severed in its lap. A sign described the scene, “You said you wanted a little off the top.”  I’m thinking maybe I need to switch stylists….while I still have a head left to think. 

These scarecrows are fun, but the questions still remains, “why are scarecrows used mainly as an autumn decoration?”  Modern, working scarecrows don’t even resemble that pumpkin-headed guy in the overalls.  Reflective Mylar tape, automatic air cannons, and windmills are what you see most in the fields today scaring away the birds and animals. 

Perhaps the scarecrow is a harvest symbol because we are thanking him, now and in generations prior, for the hard work he’s done in keeping our harvest bounty ours and not leaving it go to the birds.  So next time you come upon one of these hard-working guardians, tip your hat, wave, and thank him for a job well done.  Even if he hasn’t scared a single crow in his life, I bet he’s made you smile.  And that deserves a bit of thanks.

The Journey Is the Reward

Hello, friends!

We are honored to share a bit of our lives with you in this blog. It seems appropriate for our first blog to introduce the family and give a little history in a nutshell.

Andy and I met in college here in Wisconsin and were dating about two years before I graduated and moved to Colorado Springs as a graphic designer. He followed me with a job transfer about half a year later. By May of the following year, we were engaged, married and into our first house together. All was splendid. We were the mid-twenties corporate junkies so typical of our generation. We thought we'd be in Colorado for quite some time, far away from our family and our roots. However, two months after the wedding, our lives changed forever.

The Farm

My grandfather passed away back in Wisconsin and we flew home for a whole week to aid my parents and see family. We enjoyed helping out on my parents' farm and on the drive back to the airport, we confided to my father that we wanted to take over the farm someday. Dad was receptive to our plans for the farm, which was to take it from a struggling crop and livestock farm to a successful "tourist farm" for city people and their kids to experience life in the country. I had always wanted to return to the farm in some capacity; it didn't matter how. That spurred into action a series of events we were not prepared for. I don't know what you all believe, but we know things happen for a reason; it's a part of our faith.

The day after we got home and back to work, Andy was fired from his job. He did nothing wrong; his supervisor wanted to hire a relative, so they made up some charges and that was that. We were shaken and scared, but suddenly saw the sign. Maybe coming back to Wisconsin is what we're supposed to do. After a month of no decisions and living pretty tight, Andy still could not find a full time job. Then we found out that I was pregnant. It should have been wonderful news, but we were stunned. I had always dreamed of being a stay-at-home mother but now I was the bread winner. Meanwhile, after continued denials from Colorado employers, Andy started to put feelers out back in Wisconsin. Immediately he had three bites from three employers begging for a face-to face interview. We sent him back for a week to look for a job and an apartment. I put in my resignation and by the end of November 2006, hauled our whole lives back across the Wisconsin state border.

Elly and an appleWe chose to live in a city close to Andy's work and close to the farm. Plus we were near both sets of parents (grandparents) and managing to live off of Andy's salesman income and my newly formed career: freelance graphic design. In May, three days after our first anniversary, we welcomed our daughter Eleanor into the world. All the while, we were living off the farm but wanting to be on the farm. Our ideas had begun to metamorphose and we no longer wanted to have a tourist farm. We wanted the real deal: healthy food that we grew ourselves to be sold directly to the consumer right off the farm. We began to immerse ourselves in literature and learn as much as we could about many different ventures: grass-fed beef, milk-fed hogs, pastured poultry and organic produce.

In August of 2007, my parents bought a home in a neighboring town and Andy, Elly and I moved onto the farm, renting just the house. I stayed home with Elly, and Andy continued to work his 8-5. We had no time at all to be involved in the farm operations. Things weren't much better than when we were living in the city. So after much debate and prayer, Andy left his full time job in February of this year and began full time work on the farm as my father's apprentice ... of sorts.

That brings us to now, August of 2008, and we are still afloat! We just celebrated two years of marriage in May and feel as though we have lived a lifetime together already. In two short years, we went from chasing that illusion of corporate success to living out the reality of true and amazing life. We are actually living! We don't have a dime in savings, and my freelance checks are few and far between. But we couldn't be closer to each other or happier. Elly actually knows her father because we are blessed to both be working from home. Andy has finally found the job of his dreams, having never fit within the business structure of the military or corporate America. I have my family farm secured for at least another generation and get to learn all about self-sufficiency and homesteading.

The Homestead

Welcome, fellow readers! Welcome to our home! Share with us as we live and learn and make mistakes. Laugh with us, cry with us; we are an open book. And as we have already discovered, the journey is the reward!

Becky & Andy Sell




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