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Letting Your Chickens Go Wild: An Alternative to Domestic Egg Production

Interested in free-ranging your chickens? Make smart choices and keep your birds safe with these tips from Jonathon Engels.

Many chicken owners, especially of the backyard ilk, would prefer to have their birds live free and enjoy a life that few hens ever do. But in reality, that’s not the way it goes. Like chickens, people are creatures of habit, and there are certain protocols to raising poultry.

Letting Your Chickens Go Wild: An Alternative to Domestic Egg Production

By and large, we tend to pair the words “chicken” and “coop” without giving it much of a second thought. We enter this fowl world and immediately turn to chicken feed and chicken wire. Chickens get a yard, people get a yard, and never the twain shall meet.

But somewhere out there in the ethers, amongst the clouds and brush and abandoned orchards of yore, there is a heaven—or at least the promise of one—in which chickens and people can both roam freely across a swath of land.

And in this promised land, chickens still lay eggs, people still eat omelets, and the world still whirls around. How can that be?

 

Legitimate Concerns

Before waxing on, it’s worth noting that wild chickens are not without their drawbacks. There are legitimate reasons for chicken coops, and there are legitimate concerns to consider when chickens are left to gallivant liberally through farm and field. That said, simple solutions do exist for these issues.

Disadvantages of Cage & Coop

 Now that we’ve focused on free range as having disadvantages, it’s worth noting that cooping up birds has its downsides too. In fact, those downsides aren’t just regarding the ideal, independent life of a chicken, but also the duties of their owners.

Wildly Advantageous for Hens and Humans

Rather than focusing on negatives, let’s get to some of the good stuff. Free-ranging hens has plenty of positives for both poultry and people, so if space is available for it, it warrants consideration.

 

A Helpful Wilding To-Do List

Prior to letting chickens run free, it’s worth doing a bit of homework and preparation. Though the chickens may feel wild, the idea and ideal for most chicken owners would be setting the stage for them to live as independent chickens whilst still providing easy-to-reach eggs. Is this even possible?

Easy Does It

In the end, free-ranging chickens certainly comes with its ups and downs, and it isn’t for everyone, every place, or every bird. However, when it does work, there’s a certain easy vibe that comes along. The chickens mind themselves. The farmer isn’t stressed about feed and fencing. Eggs keep coming, and they taste better than ever. The biggest concern usually involves stepping in some fertilizer because wild chickens just don’t seem to understand where to poop.

Jonathon Engels is a traveler, writer, and vegan gardener. Born and raised in Louisiana, he’s lived as an expat for more than a decade, worked in nearly a dozen countries, and visited dozens of others in between. His interests include permaculture, cooking, and music. More of his work can be found at Jonathon Engels: A Life About.

 

 


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