You learn a lot raising chickens. I got my first broody hen and 10 eggs when I was about 10 years old in 1953. When the chickens started to hatch, I found enough soda bottles to sell for enough money to buy an addition 12 chickens from the the local feed store and when it was dark, I placed these under the hen and she accepted them. This small bantam hen raised 22 chicks. What did I learn? The love of a mother for babies is stronger than life.
Hey Brian, since we’re focusing deep on being self-sufficient, I’d love to see a video on how to build a simple chicken coop. Possibly for free or little money, etc.
There's a few guides showing how to build free coops with older pallets. People on Craigslist try to get rid of pallets every so often you'll just have to sort out ones that are chemically treated but they'll be marked as such.
I just started keeping chickens. I started doing that to help feed my family and to rely less on the grocery store. I didn’t realize how much fun they really would be. I have some sassy hens that crack me up! I love my chickens and enjoy every moment with them😁
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My littles were gifted baby chicks for Easter, and now I’m tasked with the obligation of crash courses to keep them alive and make it a decent experience. This video really helped me shift my perspective and recognize the “possibilities”. Thank you so much!
I’m happy that you’re being positive about it but that seems like a really inconvenient gift, like “HAPPY EASTER, go do a bunch of research or the blood is on your hands” idk but me personally I’d be kinda pissed about it lol (I’d still keep them tho haha)
So nice to have instruction from a person who obviously likes the chickens and appreciates them - keeps them (and keeps them happy) not just for utilitarian reasons. A friend is going to pass on two young adult chickens to us and this video is a big help on how to keep them.
Yes, please, more chicken keeping videos for beginners. As someone who eventually wants to have chickens. this was very helpful. I'm looking forward to the day I'm a chicken keeper!!
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My wife bought chicks on a whim last night, which stressed me out. Your video has made me way less worried. I’m glad to know this won’t be that crazy an amount of work. Thank you!
I love that you are just embracing them! Too funny. I am not sure I would be alive to tell the story if I did that to my spouse. Should we test the waters? Hmm.. lol. have so much fun!
🤣 So funny that you mentioned the chicks were bought on a whim! I bought six chicks, a week ago, *ON A WHIM,* and, well, because they were 50% off and I can not resist a good sale! 🤣 They really aren't very difficult to properly care for. Food, water, clean shelter and elbow room. 🤷 The cats that the neighbors left behind when they moved demand more than that of me... *and I didn't even ask for them!* They just sort of showed up at my porch and *refuse to leave!* Wishing us all luck in raising our girls to be healthy, happy *and productive* members of society!
Once you get chickens you understand “chicken math”. I started with 15 last year, I just got another buff Brahma pullet a few months ago and I had a broody hen who hatched out 3 more chicks . Most of our flock is super friendly to the point they jump in our laps and take naps just like a lap dog. When I’m out working in the yard I generally have a them all around me plus 3 dogs and 2 cats. It saddens me to see how chickens are kept in commercial settings. I’ll never eat a store bought egg again for that reason. My flock which includes 1 rooster (who is a great guy, he takes the best care of his flock and even the new chicks. And friendly with people! ) is totally free range at the moment but after dealing with all the poop and of course the destruction to our garden,we will be constructing a fenced area for them in the fall. We will give them ample space to roam though because they are truly so happy when they free range and it kills me a little bit to take that from them. ❤
Very informative. Many years ago I had a pair of ducks. If you ever want some fowl that make good pets, I'd encourage you to get a pair (a male and a female) of ducks. The males aren't aggressive and noisy like roosters. They will keep your gardens free of snails, slugs, and other pests, and they are actually a little affectionate. The female will lay eggs...they are good eating and make the fluffiest cake batter. Thanks for another great vid!😊
I heard that ducks are too "hard on" the females, so you can't let her get stressed by the males constant need for her, if you know what I mean. I'd keep 2 females, and get more eggs. 2 males are good as pets, and company for eachother. One duck alone will get depressed. Please adopt a male duck, they are not being adopted as they are not necessary for eggs.
I’m a new chicken papa. My babies are 6 weeks, and I’ve had them 4 week and can’t wait to move them to the coop/run I built for them. Would love to see more chicken content!
Eggcellant video! Very concise and informative. I would like to mention you do need ventilation in the winter even in snowy/colder climates to prevent moisture build up. That can cause frostbite on toes and combs. Most find a bit of screening in a window up high on the wall helps to alleviate the issue.🥚🥚🥚
Definitely more chicken videos,, you wouldn't happen to know about rabbits and chickens living together and things about rabbits or turkeys?? Great video man!!
Great starter vid! ❤️ We've had chickens for 2 years now, and I can't imagine life without them. They are SO much fun. And with the increase in egg prices, it's nice to have our own. PLUS - they help with so many other things in the garden - like free chicken manure, they help mix the compost pile, they help with pest control, and they eat our kitchen scraps. Plus - they're adorable and hilarious. One feeder we JUST switched to is a Treadle Feeder, because we have a mice issue. We're hoping this new feeder will be a little less messy, and reduce or eliminate the mice issue. A couple other things to consider - hens are NOT silent, by any means. If you haven't heard it, look up the "egg song". One thing to mention about the coop - make sure it's surrounded with sturdy material and predator proof - especially at night. Foxes, racoons, opossums, cats... etc. Additionally, we've had to learn to be our own home vet, so-to-speak. Bumble foot can be an issue, and will need to be addressed asap. I love to see other people's set-ups! Helps give us ideas for ours. Keep the chicken vidz comin'!
Could you please explain in more detail what to expect 'sound-wise' when raising chickens? Also, where do you live? Are chickens permitted in your area by the municipality?
@@davej.2761 Fortunately the "loudness" it's really only around the time a chicken lays an egg, but that can be spread out throughout the day. And not ALL our chickens sing the egg song... but most do. It's loud enough that we can hear it inside the house a little. We've talked to our surrounding neighbors about it, and they've all said it's not bad, and that they actually like hearing the chickens. (Hopefully they're not just being nice.) It's not as loud as a rooster, but it's not quiet either. Try looking up some TH-cam videos of the "egg song" - Hopefully that will give you some idea of how loud it is. Otherwise, their little clucks and peeps and purrs are pretty quiet, and pretty adorable, in my opinion. We live in a suburb outside Denver, Colorado. In our city, we don't have to have a permit, but we're restricted on the number we can have, and we're required to have a certain number of square feet of coop space per bird. And we're not allowed to have roosters. I know it's different everywhere, so you'll have to look up your local ordinances. Hope I covered all your questions. Good luck!!!
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I don’t have or should say can’t have chickens but I’m fascinated by those who do and would love to. So yes, Brian I watch all your videos and I love each one ! Thank you for all your hard work on each episode!
You nailed it! I produced videos of every description for over two-decades; to include high-end commercial spots, corporate media, political ads and network news, (before those became indistinguishable) feature segments, loction remotes, on and on, You covered a single topic concisely, with an even pace and clarity throughout. You did exactly what you said you wanted to do at the top, and then did it. Few people know how hard that is. Fewer actually do it. Excellent work!
LOVED this video - you KISSed it really well. It reminded me of when I was able to have chickens - life situation has changed :O). My husband built a passive solar salt-box coup from industrial scraps from a scrap yard, so, next to nothing. We didn't have access to the pine shavings but had lots of hay and I actually didn't mind cleaning out the coup every few weeks - the decomposition helped during the winter months too - minus 40F :O) I love the way you summed up the environmental and ecological advantages, not just those eggier tasting eggs with yolks that made my lemon meringue pies look like I'd used food colouring :O) You summed up and kept everything simple, cheap and fun, and......get one of the most complete foods out of it all. The chicks shared a porch off the living room, our children were pretty young then - they loved the experience. Thanks - watch no matter what you're sharing. You know your stuff with fact and experience based information and present it so well. Take care, keep it up!!
I used to have chickens before we moved to Tennessee ❤I miss my chickens. And can’t wait until we move to our forever home and we can get established.❤
I have 8 hens. I ordered 15, one died. I sold 6. I had chickens probably 16-17 years ago so I'm relearning everything. But the egg prices at the beginning of the year got me back into chickens just as 2020 got me back into gardening.
Another great, informative video! I raised chickens years ago (not since my husband passed) and they were fun. Living in northern Canada, they were raised as meat birds rather than egg layers. We raised 50 per season. The best tasting food. I would love to have egg laying hens, but it is just not economical to heat a building during the 6-7 months of winter.
Great video!! Thanks to you and a couple other creators who raise chickens I am approaching my one year anniversary as a chicken mom! One of my best thanks to them! Mine have been so therapeutic, a perfect way to balance out a stressful career. And my plants have never been happier either. They are seriously one of the best things I have done for myself. Thank you!!
We just bought 8 chicks about 1 month ago. My brother is building a coup ( hope it is ready soon). We are very excited about it both for the fresh eggs perspective but also my grandkids are hoping they will be pets too. I’m hoping to incorporate their waste in my garden but also I generally have home grown produce that goes to waste because we just can’t eat it fast enough. Win/win. They are getting too big now for the brooder now so they are going outside for most of the day. They are fun and definitely have different personalities.
I live in the country, no HOA, no restrictive covenants!!!! Love it. My next door neighbor has chickens, and at least three roosters. They bring us eggs occasionally. One thing you did not mention, the hens make noise too! Sometimes, they are louder than the roosters. I don't hear the roosters anymore, you get used to the noise. I want to have chickens at our next house, so I appreciate this video, and would appreciate further teaching in this area. And I watch all of your videos, and I love you too. 🙂
Watch all your videos! Don't have any dirt areas anymore😢. Gardening in waist level gardening boxes now. But sure do enjoy learning everything you have to offer. Your book has been very helpful. Thanks!
Holy Synchronicity Brian! I’m on Long Island and just spent my first full day with my 6 girls free ranging in the backyard while I was gardening. They’re the first chickens I have ever raised. They’re about 9 weeks old. 6 different breeds, all with very different chickenalities. I noticed that a lot of comments were about not being allowed to have chickens. If you really want to raise them, go have a face to face w/ the local authorities and ask if you can get a waiver to raise them. I think a lot of towns are considering allowing. I had to ask my direct neighbors if they would be okay. Both said yes, so I was good to go as long as nobody complains. The girls were all back in their coop on their own by late afternoon. I have a prefabricated coop similar to your grey example in the video except it’s red and white. I had a bunch of 1 1/2”thk x 2’w x 5’ long bluestone slabs laying around and set them around the coop perimeter to prevent predators from digging in. The slabs are so heavy, I can hardly move them. Raccoons, cats are nighttime predators that I worry about. Hawks are a daytime concern. My yard is fenced in but not impenetrable.
I found out about your channel right before you moved liked the video I watched so I subscribed and started as far back as I could go and started watching. Now that I am all caught up I watch everything you upload. Love your channel ❤️
I am moving to the country from suburbia. Like you said I have 3 dogs which are a lot of work. I didn't even know you didn't need a rooster for the hens to lay eggs. Thank you for breaking it down so simply.
I watch all of your videos, no matter the subject! Now you have me wanting chickens! I live in the city limits and our county community is fighting for our rights to have chickens. Hopefully....one day...we too may have them.
Our city recently passed an ordinance to allow us to have three hens, but no roosters... But, alas, my HOA still forbids it. I don't plan on ever buying in an HOA again, unless I am the HOA. LOL. Hope you do not have an HOA. God bless!!!
@@suzanbak1 Indoors? Aren't they noisy? How many do you keep indoors??? Hmmmm. That would be great for people who have HOAs. (I plan on ditching mine ASAP.)
I absolutely love my bantam chickens! They are so much more fun to watch than I ever expected. We have a broody mama who has hatched eggs twice. So fun to watch her train those babies!
I have 15 from ordering thru a local hatchery. Received 18, lost 2 1st week. Grew them from 1 day old. Now, we are at 18 weeks, I am getting about 5 eggs last week, 2 so far this week, it has been rewarding, alot of work, money & time. I wouldn't change it for anything. I love all my girls. I did get 1 Rooster & sent him to a friend's farm once he was 15 weeks old. We are all happier now. Thank you for the tips, love how you did easy & inexpensive. We did also. I got auto door, helped in a.m. & p.m. duties. Everybody should experience the love of chickens at least once. So cool!
I think you did a great job of laying down the basics! I am relatively new to raising chickens. I had 2 for a year that my daughter basically gave me and fell in love! We had some unfortunate tragedy and a few house moves. Now I have 4 chickens, about 9 wks old. I hope to have many more someday but these ladies keep me plenty busy for now. 😊 Thanks for sharing!
So Happy, I put them in a rabbit hutch, one jump onto the edge while I was cleaning out the wood shavings, I put her right back in there and closed the top.
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I watch all of your video's......but I don't have chickens and probably not going to get any. I just find your video's interesting and full of good information. I would like to have a chicken as a pet because I think they are interesting and would be a fun pet.
Loved this video, more please. QUESTION: do pullets bond with you as well as if you bought day olds? FYI: I watch EVERY video, on BOTH channels, as soon as I see them come out! ♥️ Another FYI😂 referenced your book again today!
i considering putting chicken out to eat the thousands of grasshopper that are eating my newly planted figs trees. your video was simply the best i have seen on the basics. wow! thank you. please keep em coming.
We got 7 hens and a rooster in April, and I'm just learning about how to care for them now! They are definitely very easy, but I'm so glad I found your video! Great information, and I learned a lot I didn't know, even having them for 6 months now 😊
Great video! I can't have chickens cause I rent, but I watch all of your videos because they're just so fun and I do learn something in pretty much every video even if I don't need to use it for now. Maybe one day. I actually always wondered about the salmonella on the eggs issue, if it even really is an issue. I'd be curious to learn about that and if you need to wash your hands after handling etc. Maybe in another video.
Omg I am so happy that you are doing a video on chickens. It is true they all have their own personalities. I have a Wyandotte hen that anytime I am outside she is stuck to me like glue. ( She has the personality of a dog 😂) She will wait for me every night to carry her to the coop and put her to bed. She has to say good night to me every night which makes it really hard to go on vacation but I love her personality so much.
I ❤ this. I’m renting so I can’t have chickens but am interested in definitely supporting local farms. Can you visit some local farms in your area that grow chickens and sell eggs? Like either at your local grocery store or farmers market just for comparison reasons? Not that your experience raising chickens & eggs isn’t helpful, but just to raise awareness. And that bit at the end about how people get dogs as pets without considering chickens first 🤯. Thank you for sharing all the great knowledge.
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I watch all your videos! I would love to have fresh eggs, but our HOA does not allow livestock. I understand the reasoning behind the rules, but several neighborhoods inside the city limits have coops and have a yearly coop tour. Would love just a few to feed us and share the food scraps we don't always compost.
How to Amend HOA Bylaws and Covenants in 6 Steps. 1. Proposal of Amendment The first step consists of a proposal describing the changes to the bylaw or covenant. The board will receive this proposal and then submit it for review. 2. Meeting to Discuss The board will then discuss the proposed amendment at a board meeting. During this meeting, the board must allow homeowners to provide their input on the proposal. In some cases, the board may call a special meeting to confer. At any time before step 3, you can obtain signatures showing support for the amendment. 3. Voting Following review, the entire membership will then vote either for or against the amendment. Certain requirements may apply here, too. For instance, in California, HOAs must use secret ballots to vote for these changes. The process for changing HOA covenants will also need secret ballots. Some associations may have trouble with voter turnout. In that case, the HOA board may extend the voting period. 4. Counting of Votes The next step in the process of how to change HOA bylaws and covenants is counting the ballots. The tallying of the votes usually takes place during an open meeting. This way, homeowners can watch their votes being counted. Doing this not only ensures transparency but also gives members peace of mind. 5. Approval of the Amendment Homeowners associations require a majority vote from the membership to approve the amendment. What counts as a majority will depend on your governing documents. Usually, though, HOAs need two-thirds or three-quarters of members to approve the change. 6. Recording and Effectivity After approval, changes to the CC&Rs must be recorded with the county recorder’s office. Bylaws, on the other hand, don’t need recording. Instead, bylaws become effective when notice is given to the membership of the change. Of course, that does not mean the board can skip the notice when it comes to covenant changes.
There is an issue with large rat snakes. I punched the ticket on at least a half dozen in the last year. And if you have mice you could have a problem with copperheads.
Stopping chickens (ducks and geese too) from flooding their nest area (or crawling into the water bowls), and spilling out all their food onto the ground - I found that (a sizeable investment - but long lasting) getting (Grainger ?) 2 of those fluorescent orange road pillars with their heavy black rubber bases. Get 2 inexpensive aluminum BUNDT cake pans. Adjust and cut out the bundt pan hole as needed - for properly fitting as a snug trough onto the vertical orange pillar. You can then lower down (chicks) or raise up (adults) the watering or seed troughs and save your water and seed expenses. As the chickens eventually are put into a pasture or a chicken yard - these same units can be used out there - until you finally get the chickens to peck their seed off the ground - but still use the watering trough for safe, secure, clean, and tidy watering of the flock. Ducklings and goslings will want to crawl into the water troughs so having the proper height for drinking and not being able to wing-and-leg climb up into the water trough, keeps the water clean.
We ordered our coop today and went out to purchase the necessities tonight. I'm so excited and learned a lot from this. It put my mind at ease that I can do this!
Free feeders and waterers..ask at your local grocery store that has a bakery, for their empty 2 gal. icing buckets with lids and handles. Then cut holes just large enough for the chickens to be able to reach in to the bottom. Around the top of the sides. I put 5 evenly spaced .The reason is, you don’t want them to be able to get inside the bucket and kick the feed around, but still allows them to reach to the bottom. This method keeps all feed inside so none goes to waste. The same method works for waterers. You can just set them on the ground, or hang up inside a coop during the winter months. Saves feeding everyday if you fill them up and let them eat the feed down gradually.
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I have no desire to have chickens, although I’d love a cute chicken coop!! And I almost skipped watching this video but I so look forward to the videos, I watched anyways and loved it!! I learned so much!! But still don’t want chickens… just more of your videos!! They make my day better!! ❤
I know 2 neighbors on my street that have them open to a popular road. Don’t think anyone cares/enforces chicken laws lol. Plus in my city it’s a small fine worst case scenario
I currently have 10 Cochins in a brooder, (I am a first timer with chickens)5 weeks old. Coop is ready, I built it myself. I purchased a chicken run from Amazon, 12x9 and am upgrading the fencing around it to make it predator proof. I’m just waiting for the chicks to have all their feathers, I figure it will be about 2 weeks from now. From everything I have read and watched the number one thing is making their coop and yard predator proof. The food and water are easy. I live outside Atlanta and we have almost every predator, coyotes, foxes, opossums, raccoons, snakes, owls, hawks… And they all want to eat chickens.
This guide is perfect for beginners like me! I love how you broke down the basics in such a clear and approachable way. It’s great to see tips on everything from choosing breeds to setting up the coop and feeding. I feel so much more confident about starting my own backyard flock after watching this. Thank you for the amazing content!
I just want to thank you, I’ve grown tired of city life and often pondered what would happen to many people if we suddenly were unable to get our food from grocery stores. I love dinosaurs and would love to have a chicken farm if nothing else but for self sufficiency and the companionship of little dinos. The more people start to think this way the happier I am, because I want people to be healthy and strong but I don’t want to be responsible for everyone. Keep up the good work and have a great harvest!! 😊
Well, I fit under the one that just loves your video. Lol.. per city rules, I can't have chickens we are too close to neighbors. If we lived just one block south we could have them.
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This was the first video I watched on chicken keeping. Obviously, I will watch other videos, but I’m happy that this video was so informative and to see that it’s not as high maintenance as keeping a dog .
Thanks for this video. I would like to get some chickens but the thought of all the work it entails was intimidating. Now that I've seen this video, I see that it really isn't that much work.
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I have desired to have chickens for some time now. Can't convince my wife to do so. She says she is afraid of being chased by them! Lol!! Appreciate your content! Be safe and God bless!
I keep seeing videos where Black Copper Maran roosters are very friendly and good flock guardians. It would be awesome to see you hatch your own chicks for next years content! Love your content!
Thank you so much for the info. My dad always had chickens. I grew up with them, but never cared to learn. I wasn't ever going to have any. Now at 64 I'm helping our goddaughter start raising them. He's not here now and you have taken his place! Thank you so much!❤❤
This video was so helpful. My husband and I are in our 60's and got our first ever chickens the end of April. We look forward to gathering eggs and feeding them our garden scraps. Thank You BJ from LA (lower Alabama)
I appreciate the video Brian, I took a chicken raising class through our county and the City is now allowing chickens after they approve the structure. You may have moved me to yes for other videos discouraged me. I will wait to watch your next video on chickens.
Great video! My wife wanted chickens for 40 years. When we got them, I don't know why I didn't get them sooner! We live in a little town. They visit my neighbors and eat the bugs in their yards too. And we give them eggs. Now some of our neighbors have their own chickens now too!
I enjoyed watching this. Covered a lot. Love keeping chickens. I assume that you pick up the food dishes in the evening and you said that scraps are eaten during the day. Just for those who don’t realise it, food in open feeders and scraps should not be left overnight or you may encourage a rat fiesta. We use rat proof feeders to save time and give them scraps with plenty of time for them to be eaten up before evening. Ratties can get into a coop and run if they want to unless it is completely surrounded with rat proof mesh, which we don’t have because they have a big area, so we have just made it less attractive for rats to come into our yard. We use shredded hemp fibre in the coop area and it is very very absorbent and lasts really well in a deep litter style arrangement though it may be hard to find or too expensive if cost is the most important factor. Happy chicken keeping.
Thank you for this video. I got my chicks when they were 3 days old, they are now 5 weeks. I'm watching this entire video cause they are going outside pretty soon. 🥰
Not enough space for chickens, would if I could. I watch every episode because I so enjoy watching you. If I don't learn something new, you confirm what I did know or give me something to reconsider. I live in Mesa, Arizona but my Zone 9b is very different from yours. Thank you for entertaining while teaching me. If I lived closer, I'd offer free labor!
AWESOME! I've wanted chickens for fresh eggs for YEARS! Now, I'm so excited! GREAT VIDEO, easy to understand. THANK YOU! We have farmers, even a friend has his grandkids who on an "honor system" sell a dozen eggs for just $4! Another group of people send out texts stating they have up to 5,000 EGGS/DAY & charge $3/DOZEN! Compared 2 grocery store eggs - it's GREAT! I learned if an egg shows a dome when cracked, it is more fresh! I buy organic, free-range, but want my own eggs! We have 1 acre but in a town of approx. 50,000, I want my chicken coup in the back where no1 can see it! Have lots of dirty, ants, bugs, rocks, & I learned so much else! THANK YOU! I'm almost 60 yr old woman & can't build my own chicken coup but know a contractor (who's the 1 w/grandkids selling eggs on the honor system) who can build one 4 me. I'm so excited now!! I took screenshots & added notes to get/keep all info, & subscribed 2 ur channel. I'm growing potatoes easily! Live in SW so gardening is HARD here, but potatoes we 4get 2 eat n time, I stick n ground & they grow! Fear our soil in 40+ yr old house is depleted! We've tried EVERYTHING 2 get it garden-worthy (composting, banana water, fertilizer, garden soil, etc.) 2 no avail! Tried for tomatoes last 2-3 yrs & got maybe 2-3! Wanted 2 cry! Wish we lived in greener area! But, potatoes-yes! And who doesn't like tators? Smile! I keep trying 2 be more self reliant. Just not sure about garden problem! Frustrating! Again, GREAT VIDEO! THANK YOU!
I always wanted chickens. I mostly lived in the city. I retired and bought a small house in rural New Brunswick. I was watching chicken and farm videos on youtube. And as usual I said I wish I had chickens. That this evening became I will have chickens. I just want five hens. It gets quite cold here in the winter but chicken keeping is still a popular hobby. I have half an acre of land. I should be able to house and care for five hens. Thank you for the inspiration.
You learn a lot raising chickens. I got my first broody hen and 10 eggs when I was about 10 years old in 1953. When the chickens started to hatch, I found enough soda bottles to sell for enough money to buy an addition 12 chickens from the the local feed store and when it was dark, I placed these under the hen and she accepted them. This small bantam hen raised 22 chicks. What did I learn? The love of a mother for babies is stronger than life.
Love your story!! Thank you so much for sharing it.
That’s awesome!!!
Amazing!
great story!
So COOL 👍
Hey Brian, since we’re focusing deep on being self-sufficient, I’d love to see a video on how to build a simple chicken coop. Possibly for free or little money, etc.
There's a few guides showing how to build free coops with older pallets. People on Craigslist try to get rid of pallets every so often you'll just have to sort out ones that are chemically treated but they'll be marked as such.
@@TheLyingFigurethanks. I’d also love to see what Brian uses as a compost “container.”
@@KeithWheelerBooksI’ve definitely seen compost bins made out of pallets as well!
I just started keeping chickens. I started doing that to help feed my family and to rely less on the grocery store. I didn’t realize how much fun they really would be. I have some sassy hens that crack me up! I love my chickens and enjoy every moment with them😁
They really are fun to have!
hello im also going to keep chickens , i dont know how many i should start, is it good to start with 35pcs chicks? or lower??
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thanks
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@@princeanjogrewalwhat did u end up starting with lol? i got 10
Hi guys I'm so excited I'm waiting for my 50 chicks next wk I've learn a lot 😅dankie
My littles were gifted baby chicks for Easter, and now I’m tasked with the obligation of crash courses to keep them alive and make it a decent experience. This video really helped me shift my perspective and recognize the “possibilities”. Thank you so much!
I’m happy that you’re being positive about it but that seems like a really inconvenient gift, like “HAPPY EASTER, go do a bunch of research or the blood is on your hands” idk but me personally I’d be kinda pissed about it lol (I’d still keep them tho haha)
😂
So nice to have instruction from a person who obviously likes the chickens and appreciates them - keeps them (and keeps them happy) not just for utilitarian reasons. A friend is going to pass on two young adult chickens to us and this video is a big help on how to keep them.
Yes, please, more chicken keeping videos for beginners. As someone who eventually wants to have chickens. this was very helpful. I'm looking forward to the day I'm a chicken keeper!!
you can visit my channel for more quality videos about chickens keeping just click on my channel and see videos
thanks
link is here UCTsA3RiOZ5HrGMNgv3_Dz5w
How did you go? Did you end up getting some chooks?
My wife bought chicks on a whim last night, which stressed me out. Your video has made me way less worried. I’m glad to know this won’t be that crazy an amount of work. Thank you!
Super easy!
I love that you are just embracing them! Too funny. I am not sure I would be alive to tell the story if I did that to my spouse. Should we test the waters? Hmm.. lol. have so much fun!
I’m glad to know my wife is as crazy as yours and I am not alone lol
🤣 So funny that you mentioned the chicks were bought on a whim! I bought six chicks, a week ago, *ON A WHIM,* and, well, because they were 50% off and I can not resist a good sale! 🤣
They really aren't very difficult to properly care for. Food, water, clean shelter and elbow room. 🤷 The cats that the neighbors left behind when they moved demand more than that of me... *and I didn't even ask for them!* They just sort of showed up at my porch and *refuse to leave!*
Wishing us all luck in raising our girls to be healthy, happy *and productive* members of society!
@@rattlecat5968and particularly in the night 😂😂
Keeping chickens is so so easy!! Not only is it easy but they are so entertaining 😊
They really are!
little Velociraptors, grow extra kale in the garden, they love it. and lawnmower clippings
Once you get chickens you understand “chicken math”. I started with 15 last year, I just got another buff Brahma pullet a few months ago and I had a broody hen who hatched out 3 more chicks . Most of our flock is super friendly to the point they jump in our laps and take naps just like a lap dog. When I’m out working in the yard I generally have a them all around me plus 3 dogs and 2 cats. It saddens me to see how chickens are kept in commercial settings. I’ll never eat a store bought egg again for that reason. My flock which includes 1 rooster (who is a great guy, he takes the best care of his flock and even the new chicks. And friendly with people! ) is totally free range at the moment but after dealing with all the poop and of course the destruction to our garden,we will be constructing a fenced area for them in the fall. We will give them ample space to roam though because they are truly so happy when they free range and it kills me a little bit to take that from them. ❤
That sounds awesome!
Very informative. Many years ago I had a pair of ducks. If you ever want some fowl that make good pets, I'd encourage you to get a pair (a male and a female) of ducks. The males aren't aggressive and noisy like roosters. They will keep your gardens free of snails, slugs, and other pests, and they are actually a little affectionate. The female will lay eggs...they are good eating and make the fluffiest cake batter. Thanks for another great vid!😊
I’ve been thinking about ducks. Soon 😁😉
😊
I heard that ducks are too "hard on" the females, so you can't let her get stressed by the males constant need for her, if you know what I mean. I'd keep 2 females, and get more eggs. 2 males are good as pets, and company for eachother. One duck alone will get depressed. Please adopt a male duck, they are not being adopted as they are not necessary for eggs.
I’m a new chicken papa. My babies are 6 weeks, and I’ve had them 4 week and can’t wait to move them to the coop/run I built for them. Would love to see more chicken content!
On it! 😁
I brought chicks in April 2024 and am learning as I go. This video is great. Thank you
This guy's advice is 100% solid
Eggcellant video! Very concise and informative. I would like to mention you do need ventilation in the winter even in snowy/colder climates to prevent moisture build up. That can cause frostbite on toes and combs. Most find a bit of screening in a window up high on the wall helps to alleviate the issue.🥚🥚🥚
Definitely more chicken videos,, you wouldn't happen to know about rabbits and chickens living together and things about rabbits or turkeys?? Great video man!!
Great starter vid! ❤️
We've had chickens for 2 years now, and I can't imagine life without them. They are SO much fun. And with the increase in egg prices, it's nice to have our own. PLUS - they help with so many other things in the garden - like free chicken manure, they help mix the compost pile, they help with pest control, and they eat our kitchen scraps. Plus - they're adorable and hilarious.
One feeder we JUST switched to is a Treadle Feeder, because we have a mice issue. We're hoping this new feeder will be a little less messy, and reduce or eliminate the mice issue.
A couple other things to consider - hens are NOT silent, by any means. If you haven't heard it, look up the "egg song".
One thing to mention about the coop - make sure it's surrounded with sturdy material and predator proof - especially at night. Foxes, racoons, opossums, cats... etc.
Additionally, we've had to learn to be our own home vet, so-to-speak. Bumble foot can be an issue, and will need to be addressed asap.
I love to see other people's set-ups! Helps give us ideas for ours. Keep the chicken vidz comin'!
Could you please explain in more detail what to expect 'sound-wise' when raising chickens? Also, where do you live? Are chickens permitted in your area by the municipality?
@@davej.2761 Fortunately the "loudness" it's really only around the time a chicken lays an egg, but that can be spread out throughout the day. And not ALL our chickens sing the egg song... but most do. It's loud enough that we can hear it inside the house a little. We've talked to our surrounding neighbors about it, and they've all said it's not bad, and that they actually like hearing the chickens. (Hopefully they're not just being nice.) It's not as loud as a rooster, but it's not quiet either. Try looking up some TH-cam videos of the "egg song" - Hopefully that will give you some idea of how loud it is. Otherwise, their little clucks and peeps and purrs are pretty quiet, and pretty adorable, in my opinion.
We live in a suburb outside Denver, Colorado. In our city, we don't have to have a permit, but we're restricted on the number we can have, and we're required to have a certain number of square feet of coop space per bird. And we're not allowed to have roosters. I know it's different everywhere, so you'll have to look up your local ordinances.
Hope I covered all your questions. Good luck!!!
We've been considering getting chickens. Now I'm sure! Thank you!
Yes, please, more chicken content . We have been wanting to get chickens 🐔 the past several years .
Thank you so much
GREAT CONTENT 🙏🙏🙏🐔
Will do!!
you can visit my channel for more quality videos about chickens keeping just click on my channel and see videos
thanks
link is here UCTsA3RiOZ5HrGMNgv3_Dz5w
I don’t have or should say can’t have chickens but I’m fascinated by those who do and would love to. So yes, Brian I watch all your videos and I love each one ! Thank you for all your hard work on each episode!
Thank you! 🙂
I had a small farm in the 80’s , I loved my chickens. I yearn to have them again. Predators are a big problem here in rural Ohio.
Don’t plan on raising chickens, but do plan on watching your every video❤❤❤ Love y’all too❤❤❤
Thank you! 😊
Can’t have chickens but this was really informative and interesting. You did a great teaching job!
Thank you!
You nailed it! I produced videos of every description for over two-decades; to include high-end commercial spots, corporate media, political ads and network news, (before those became indistinguishable) feature segments, loction remotes, on and on, You covered a single topic concisely, with an even pace and clarity throughout. You did exactly what you said you wanted to do at the top, and then did it. Few people know how hard that is. Fewer actually do it. Excellent work!
LOVED this video - you KISSed it really well. It reminded me of when I was able to have chickens - life situation has changed :O). My husband built a passive solar salt-box coup from industrial scraps from a scrap yard, so, next to nothing. We didn't have access to the pine shavings but had lots of hay and I actually didn't mind cleaning out the coup every few weeks - the decomposition helped during the winter months too - minus 40F :O) I love the way you summed up the environmental and ecological advantages, not just those eggier tasting eggs with yolks that made my lemon meringue pies look like I'd used food colouring :O) You summed up and kept everything simple, cheap and fun, and......get one of the most complete foods out of it all. The chicks shared a porch off the living room, our children were pretty young then - they loved the experience. Thanks - watch no matter what you're sharing. You know your stuff with fact and experience based information and present it so well. Take care, keep it up!!
I used to have chickens before we moved to Tennessee ❤I miss my chickens. And can’t wait until we move to our forever home and we can get established.❤
They really are fun !
This is by far the best video I've seen for a beginner. Thank you for making this, I'll be getting myself some chicks!!
I have 8 hens. I ordered 15, one died. I sold 6. I had chickens probably 16-17 years ago so I'm relearning everything. But the egg prices at the beginning of the year got me back into chickens just as 2020 got me back into gardening.
Great video…. Thank you….. not getting chickens, but it’s still interesting to learn🌸
Another great, informative video! I raised chickens years ago (not since my husband passed) and they were fun. Living in northern Canada, they were raised as meat birds rather than egg layers. We raised 50 per season. The best tasting food. I would love to have egg laying hens, but it is just not economical to heat a building during the 6-7 months of winter.
Great video!! Thanks to you and a couple other creators who raise chickens I am approaching my one year anniversary as a chicken mom! One of my best thanks to them! Mine have been so therapeutic, a perfect way to balance out a stressful career. And my plants have never been happier either. They are seriously one of the best things I have done for myself. Thank you!!
That is awesome!
Mahalo.. I’m in Hawaii and food costs continue to rise. We eat eggs daily and looking at our options. Thanks for the info. 🌺Leilani
We just bought 8 chicks about 1 month ago. My brother is building a coup ( hope it is ready soon). We are very excited about it both for the fresh eggs perspective but also my grandkids are hoping they will be pets too. I’m hoping to incorporate their waste in my garden but also I generally have home grown produce that goes to waste because we just can’t eat it fast enough. Win/win. They are getting too big now for the brooder now so they are going outside for most of the day. They are fun and definitely have different personalities.
That’s awesome!
You are terrific! I relearned everything I used to know 20 years ago! Excellent and so easy to watch and learn!
Husband & I watch EVERY video! We love them. Been contemplating 🐓🐓🐓’s and looking forward to your breed info! 🥚🥚🥚🥚🥚
Thank you!
I live in the country, no HOA, no restrictive covenants!!!! Love it. My next door neighbor has chickens, and at least three roosters. They bring us eggs occasionally. One thing you did not mention, the hens make noise too! Sometimes, they are louder than the roosters. I don't hear the roosters anymore, you get used to the noise. I want to have chickens at our next house, so I appreciate this video, and would appreciate further teaching in this area. And I watch all of your videos, and I love you too. 🙂
Thank you!🙂
Watch all your videos! Don't have any dirt areas anymore😢. Gardening in waist level gardening boxes now. But sure do enjoy learning everything you have to offer.
Your book has been very helpful.
Thanks!
GREAT VIDEO I AM NOW GETTING 5 CHICKS THANKS FOR KEEPING IT SIMPLE.. YES MORE CHICKEN CONTENT PLEASE!
Holy Synchronicity Brian! I’m on Long Island and just spent my first full day with my 6 girls free ranging in the backyard while I was gardening. They’re the first chickens I have ever raised. They’re about 9 weeks old. 6 different breeds, all with very different chickenalities. I noticed that a lot of comments were about not being allowed to have chickens. If you really want to raise them, go have a face to face w/ the local authorities and ask if you can get a waiver to raise them. I think a lot of towns are considering allowing. I had to ask my direct neighbors if they would be okay. Both said yes, so I was good to go as long as nobody complains. The girls were all back in their coop on their own by late afternoon. I have a prefabricated coop similar to your grey example in the video except it’s red and white. I had a bunch of 1 1/2”thk x 2’w x 5’ long bluestone slabs laying around and set them around the coop perimeter to prevent predators from digging in. The slabs are so heavy, I can hardly move them. Raccoons, cats are nighttime predators that I worry about. Hawks are a daytime concern. My yard is fenced in but not impenetrable.
That’s great! Chickenalities 😂
Love you Brian. Eggs not so much.
Guilty- I watch ALL your videos. Sometimes more than once.
Thank you!
I found out about your channel right before you moved liked the video I watched so I subscribed and started as far back as I could go and started watching. Now that I am all caught up I watch everything you upload. Love your channel ❤️
Thank you! 🙂
I am moving to the country from suburbia. Like you said I have 3 dogs which are a lot of work. I didn't even know you didn't need a rooster for the hens to lay eggs. Thank you for breaking it down so simply.
I watch all of your videos, no matter the subject! Now you have me wanting chickens! I live in the city limits and our county community is fighting for our rights to have chickens. Hopefully....one day...we too may have them.
Thank you! Good luck 🙂
Some have small indoor quail for eggs.. it’s a start ;)
Our city recently passed an ordinance to allow us to have three hens, but no roosters... But, alas, my HOA still forbids it. I don't plan on ever buying in an HOA again, unless I am the HOA. LOL. Hope you do not have an HOA. God bless!!!
@@suzanbak1 Indoors? Aren't they noisy? How many do you keep indoors??? Hmmmm. That would be great for people who have HOAs. (I plan on ditching mine ASAP.)
I absolutely love my bantam chickens! They are so much more fun to watch than I ever expected. We have a broody mama who has hatched eggs twice. So fun to watch her train those babies!
How fun!
Perfect timing! I'm going to pick up my first chicks today. Can't wait.
That’s awesome!
I have 15 from ordering thru a local hatchery. Received 18, lost 2 1st week. Grew them from 1 day old. Now, we are at 18 weeks, I am getting about 5 eggs last week, 2 so far this week, it has been rewarding, alot of work, money & time. I wouldn't change it for anything. I love all my girls. I did get 1 Rooster & sent him to a friend's farm once he was 15 weeks old. We are all happier now. Thank you for the tips, love how you did easy & inexpensive. We did also. I got auto door, helped in a.m. & p.m. duties. Everybody should experience the love of chickens at least once. So cool!
I think you did a great job of laying down the basics! I am relatively new to raising chickens. I had 2 for a year that my daughter basically gave me and fell in love! We had some unfortunate tragedy and a few house moves. Now I have 4 chickens, about 9 wks old. I hope to have many more someday but these ladies keep me plenty busy for now. 😊 Thanks for sharing!
You’re welcome 🙂
So Happy, I put them in a rabbit hutch, one jump onto the edge while I was cleaning out the wood shavings, I put her right back in there and closed the top.
Love the chicken content requesting to see more! Haven’t purchased any yet, but watching these videos makes me consider it.
I’m on it!
you can visit my channel for more quality videos about chickens keeping just click on my channel and see videos
thanks
link is here UCTsA3RiOZ5HrGMNgv3_Dz5w
I haven't missed a video since I started watching. I want chickens so I can have my own fresh eggs every day. Plus it will help save me some money.
Thank you!
I have chickies, my girls are hand raised. Have them for eggs and fun.❤
It’s the best!
I watch all of your video's......but I don't have chickens and probably not going to get any. I just find your video's interesting and full of good information. I would like to have a chicken as a pet because I think they are interesting and would be a fun pet.
Loved this video, more please. QUESTION: do pullets bond with you as well as if you bought day olds? FYI: I watch EVERY video, on BOTH channels, as soon as I see them come out! ♥️ Another FYI😂 referenced your book again today!
i considering putting chicken out to eat the thousands of grasshopper that are eating my newly planted figs trees. your video was simply the best i have seen on the basics. wow! thank you. please keep em coming.
We got 7 hens and a rooster in April, and I'm just learning about how to care for them now! They are definitely very easy, but I'm so glad I found your video! Great information, and I learned a lot I didn't know, even having them for 6 months now 😊
Hello . Can you share where you got your rooster from? Thanks
we have never had chickens be for so it is nice
to know these things ☺
yes
Great video! I can't have chickens cause I rent, but I watch all of your videos because they're just so fun and I do learn something in pretty much every video even if I don't need to use it for now. Maybe one day. I actually always wondered about the salmonella on the eggs issue, if it even really is an issue. I'd be curious to learn about that and if you need to wash your hands after handling etc. Maybe in another video.
I didn't realize those food and water dispensares lasted so long. Loved all the info. Thank you.
You’re welcome 🙂
More chicken related videos please!.. like how much and what to feed different ages of chickens ❤
Will do!
Omg I am so happy that you are doing a video on chickens. It is true they all have their own personalities. I have a Wyandotte hen that anytime I am outside she is stuck to me like glue. ( She has the personality of a dog 😂) She will wait for me every night to carry her to the coop and put her to bed. She has to say good night to me every night which makes it really hard to go on vacation but I love her personality so much.
That is awesome!
I ❤ this. I’m renting so I can’t have chickens but am interested in definitely supporting local farms. Can you visit some local farms in your area that grow chickens and sell eggs? Like either at your local grocery store or farmers market just for comparison reasons? Not that your experience raising chickens & eggs isn’t helpful, but just to raise awareness. And that bit at the end about how people get dogs as pets without considering chickens first 🤯. Thank you for sharing all the great knowledge.
I will look into it. We have some farms around here. That may be fun to go check out 🙂
I'm in my first year of raising chickens. I get big beautiful organic eggs. I'm always learning more.❤
It’s the best!
you can visit my channel for more quality videos about chickens keeping just click on my channel and see videos
thanks
link is here UCTsA3RiOZ5HrGMNgv3_Dz5w
I watch all your videos! I would love to have fresh eggs, but our HOA does not allow livestock. I understand the reasoning behind the rules, but several neighborhoods inside the city limits have coops and have a yearly coop tour. Would love just a few to feed us and share the food scraps we don't always compost.
How to Amend HOA Bylaws and Covenants in 6 Steps.
1. Proposal of Amendment
The first step consists of a proposal describing the changes to the bylaw or covenant. The board will receive this proposal and then submit it for review.
2. Meeting to Discuss
The board will then discuss the proposed amendment at a board meeting. During this meeting, the board must allow homeowners to provide their input on the proposal. In some cases, the board may call a special meeting to confer.
At any time before step 3, you can obtain signatures showing support for the amendment.
3. Voting
Following review, the entire membership will then vote either for or against the amendment. Certain requirements may apply here, too. For instance, in California, HOAs must use secret ballots to vote for these changes. The process for changing HOA covenants will also need secret ballots. Some associations may have trouble with voter turnout. In that case, the HOA board may extend the voting period.
4. Counting of Votes
The next step in the process of how to change HOA bylaws and covenants is counting the ballots. The tallying of the votes usually takes place during an open meeting. This way, homeowners can watch their votes being counted. Doing this not only ensures transparency but also gives members peace of mind.
5. Approval of the Amendment
Homeowners associations require a majority vote from the membership to approve the amendment. What counts as a majority will depend on your governing documents. Usually, though, HOAs need two-thirds or three-quarters of members to approve the change.
6. Recording and Effectivity
After approval, changes to the CC&Rs must be recorded with the county recorder’s office. Bylaws, on the other hand, don’t need recording. Instead, bylaws become effective when notice is given to the membership of the change. Of course, that does not mean the board can skip the notice when it comes to covenant changes.
Great information for a recent retiree who is moving from a condo to the woods to have chickens.
There is an issue with large rat snakes. I punched the ticket on at least a half dozen in the last year. And if you have mice you could have a problem with copperheads.
This video helped me decide to raise chickens. I didn't know it could be so simple! Thank you!
Stopping chickens (ducks and geese too) from flooding their nest area (or crawling into the water bowls), and spilling out all their food onto the ground - I found that (a sizeable investment - but long lasting) getting (Grainger ?) 2 of those fluorescent orange road pillars with their heavy black rubber bases. Get 2 inexpensive aluminum BUNDT cake pans. Adjust and cut out the bundt pan hole as needed - for properly fitting as a snug trough onto the vertical orange pillar. You can then lower down (chicks) or raise up (adults) the watering or seed troughs and save your water and seed expenses. As the chickens eventually are put into a pasture or a chicken yard - these same units can be used out there - until you finally get the chickens to peck their seed off the ground - but still use the watering trough for safe, secure, clean, and tidy watering of the flock.
Ducklings and goslings will want to crawl into the water troughs so having the proper height for drinking and not being able to wing-and-leg climb up into the water trough, keeps the water clean.
We ordered our coop today and went out to purchase the necessities tonight. I'm so excited and learned a lot from this. It put my mind at ease that I can do this!
Free feeders and waterers..ask at your local grocery store that has a bakery, for their empty 2 gal. icing buckets with lids and handles. Then cut holes just large enough for the chickens to be able to reach in to the bottom. Around the top of the sides. I put 5 evenly spaced .The reason is, you don’t want them to be able to get inside the bucket and kick the feed around, but still allows them to reach to the bottom. This method keeps all feed inside so none goes to waste. The same method works for waterers. You can just set them on the ground, or hang up inside a coop during the winter months. Saves feeding everyday if you fill them up and let them eat the feed down gradually.
Yes, more chickens please. Thanks for All your videos.
You’re welcome 🙂
you can visit my channel for more quality videos about chickens keeping just click on my channel and see videos
thanks
link is here UCTsA3RiOZ5HrGMNgv3_Dz5w
Brian, I am worried about chickens getting lice or being sick. Can you address those issues? Thanks so much.
you can visit my channel for more quality videos about chickens keeping and all about desease just click on my channel and see videos
thanks
link is here UCTsA3RiOZ5HrGMNgv3_Dz5w
I’ve always wanted chickens. Just never got any.
But actually, I watch all your videos. You never know what you will learn.
Thank you!
I wish Ihad more space to have more chickens
I have no desire to have chickens, although I’d love a cute chicken coop!! And I almost skipped watching this video but I so look forward to the videos, I watched anyways and loved it!! I learned so much!! But still don’t want chickens… just more of your videos!! They make my day better!! ❤
Thank you!🙂
I want chickens, but i live in the city. They don't allow us to have any😢
Same for me.
Just get them, they're quieter than dogs no one will complain
I know 2 neighbors on my street that have them open to a popular road. Don’t think anyone cares/enforces chicken laws lol. Plus in my city it’s a small fine worst case scenario
Live on the wild side and cluck the law/regulations
I currently have 10 Cochins in a brooder, (I am a first timer with chickens)5 weeks old. Coop is ready, I built it myself. I purchased a chicken run from Amazon, 12x9 and am upgrading the fencing around it to make it predator proof.
I’m just waiting for the chicks to have all their feathers, I figure it will be about 2 weeks from now.
From everything I have read and watched the number one thing is making their coop and yard predator proof. The food and water are easy.
I live outside Atlanta and we have almost every predator, coyotes, foxes, opossums, raccoons, snakes, owls, hawks…
And they all want to eat chickens.
Yes. Predator proofing is so important. Good luck to you and your chicks. You’re gonna have so much fun!!
I was excited to adopt a few chickens because my neighbor down the street does, but after watching this, I'm not ready. Thank you sir.
This guide is perfect for beginners like me! I love how you broke down the basics in such a clear and approachable way. It’s great to see tips on everything from choosing breeds to setting up the coop and feeding. I feel so much more confident about starting my own backyard flock after watching this. Thank you for the amazing content!
I just want to thank you, I’ve grown tired of city life and often pondered what would happen to many people if we suddenly were unable to get our food from grocery stores. I love dinosaurs and would love to have a chicken farm if nothing else but for self sufficiency and the companionship of little dinos. The more people start to think this way the happier I am, because I want people to be healthy and strong but I don’t want to be responsible for everyone. Keep up the good work and have a great harvest!! 😊
Thank you!
Well, I fit under the one that just loves your video. Lol.. per city rules, I can't have chickens we are too close to neighbors. If we lived just one block south we could have them.
I have no intent of raising chickens right now, I do watch all of your videos and ummm, I love you, too😉.
Thank you! 😊
you can visit my channel for more quality videos about chickens keeping just click on my channel and see videos
thanks
link is here UCTsA3RiOZ5HrGMNgv3_Dz5w
This was the first video I watched on chicken keeping.
Obviously, I will watch other videos, but I’m happy that this video was so informative and to see that it’s not as high maintenance as keeping a dog .
Thanks for this video. I would like to get some chickens but the thought of all the work it entails was intimidating. Now that I've seen this video, I see that it really isn't that much work.
Glad I could help 🙂
I’m about to get 5 young chickens. This was very helpful. I’m not so nervous now. 😊
you can visit my channel for more quality videos about chickens keeping just click on my channel and see videos
thanks
link is here UCTsA3RiOZ5HrGMNgv3_Dz5w
I have desired to have chickens for some time now. Can't convince my wife to do so. She says she is afraid of being chased by them! Lol!! Appreciate your content! Be safe and God bless!
she would fall in love with the chicks. When they get older, they will know her and love her too.
I keep seeing videos where Black Copper Maran roosters are very friendly and good flock guardians. It would be awesome to see you hatch your own chicks for next years content! Love your content!
Thank you!
Thank you so much for the info. My dad always had chickens. I grew up with them, but never cared to learn. I wasn't ever going to have any. Now at 64 I'm helping our goddaughter start raising them. He's not here now and you have taken his place! Thank you so much!❤❤
This video was so helpful. My husband and I are in our 60's and got our first ever chickens the end of April. We look forward to gathering eggs and feeding them our garden scraps.
Thank You
BJ from LA (lower Alabama)
That’s great! They really are fun to have 🙂
I got my first chickens last year. Buff Orpington. I always wanted chickens, and I absolutely love my ladies. I don’t know why I waited so long❤
Orpingtons are the best!!
I appreciate the video Brian, I took a chicken raising class through our county and the City is now allowing chickens after they approve the structure. You may have moved me to yes for other videos discouraged me. I will wait to watch your next video on chickens.
Thank you!
Great video! My wife wanted chickens for 40 years. When we got them, I don't know why I didn't get them sooner! We live in a little town. They visit my neighbors and eat the bugs in their yards too. And we give them eggs. Now some of our neighbors have their own chickens now too!
I enjoyed watching this. Covered a lot. Love keeping chickens. I assume that you pick up the food dishes in the evening and you said that scraps are eaten during the day. Just for those who don’t realise it, food in open feeders and scraps should not be left overnight or you may encourage a rat fiesta. We use rat proof feeders to save time and give them scraps with plenty of time for them to be eaten up before evening. Ratties can get into a coop and run if they want to unless it is completely surrounded with rat proof mesh, which we don’t have because they have a big area, so we have just made it less attractive for rats to come into our yard.
We use shredded hemp fibre in the coop area and it is very very absorbent and lasts really well in a deep litter style arrangement though it may be hard to find or too expensive if cost is the most important factor. Happy chicken keeping.
I was not sure but now i will definitely go for it
Thank you for this video. I got my chicks when they were 3 days old, they are now 5 weeks. I'm watching this entire video cause they are going outside pretty soon. 🥰
Oh good! Bout the same as mine.
@@littlehomesteadbigdreams They are six weeks old today
I would love to have chickens but don’t have really enough space for them. Interesting topic. Thanks 😊
Not enough space for chickens, would if I could. I watch every episode because I so enjoy watching you. If I don't learn something new, you confirm what I did know or give me something to reconsider. I live in Mesa, Arizona but my Zone 9b is very different from yours. Thank you for entertaining while teaching me. If I lived closer, I'd offer free labor!
Thank you!
AWESOME! I've wanted chickens for fresh eggs for YEARS! Now, I'm so excited! GREAT VIDEO, easy to understand. THANK YOU! We have farmers, even a friend has his grandkids who on an "honor system" sell a dozen eggs for just $4! Another group of people send out texts stating they have up to 5,000 EGGS/DAY & charge $3/DOZEN! Compared 2 grocery store eggs - it's GREAT! I learned if an egg shows a dome when cracked, it is more fresh! I buy organic, free-range, but want my own eggs! We have 1 acre but in a town of approx. 50,000, I want my chicken coup in the back where no1 can see it! Have lots of dirty, ants, bugs, rocks, & I learned so much else! THANK YOU! I'm almost 60 yr old woman & can't build my own chicken coup but know a contractor (who's the 1 w/grandkids selling eggs on the honor system) who can build one 4 me. I'm so excited now!! I took screenshots & added notes to get/keep all info, & subscribed 2 ur channel. I'm growing potatoes easily! Live in SW so gardening is HARD here, but potatoes we 4get 2 eat n time, I stick n ground & they grow! Fear our soil in 40+ yr old house is depleted! We've tried EVERYTHING 2 get it garden-worthy (composting, banana water, fertilizer, garden soil, etc.) 2 no avail! Tried for tomatoes last 2-3 yrs & got maybe 2-3! Wanted 2 cry! Wish we lived in greener area! But, potatoes-yes! And who doesn't like tators? Smile! I keep trying 2 be more self reliant. Just not sure about garden problem! Frustrating! Again, GREAT VIDEO! THANK YOU!
I always wanted chickens. I mostly lived in the city. I retired and bought a small house in rural New Brunswick. I was watching chicken and farm videos on youtube. And as usual I said I wish I had chickens. That this evening became I will have chickens. I just want five hens. It gets quite cold here in the winter but chicken keeping is still a popular hobby. I have half an acre of land. I should be able to house and care for five hens. Thank you for the inspiration.
Thanks Brian! This was very helpful! Those ladies are spoiled in such a beautiful home and garden!
Thank you!
I have ten chickens and I love having them. I even give them nane. Thanks for sharing. I learned so much from your videos.
You’re welcome! 🙂