How To Keep Back Garden Chickens UK - Keeping Back Yard Hens

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 19 апр 2022
  • Welcome to our guide on how to keep back garden chickens. We have been keeping back yard hens for years and in this video we share what we do and a couple of tips for keeping back garden chickens in the UK.
    We use the Haynes Chicken Manual amzn.to/3vt7xvF as our guide and bought our copy before we bought the chickens.
    Back garden chickens are great fun most of the time and children love having the hens to look after and feed. We have many pictures of our son in the back garden holding a hen or lining them up on a fence or the coop. The chickens will get used to having a cup of corn as a treat and this makes it easy for children to put them back in their run after they have finished letting them explore the garden.
    We use an automatic chicken door as it makes looking after the chickens easier. This means that when we go on holiday we only have to get someone to check the feed and water plus collect the eggs.
    Titan automatic chicken door amzn.to/3GgdocT
    You will get parasites eventually with chickens. The most common is red spider mites. These turn red after sucking the chickens blood at night while they are roosting. We use Multi-Mite Diatomaceous Earth amzn.to/3osypbA to treat ours. The mites eggs will survive for months unhatched and once they hatch they multiply incredibly fast. Check your hens often and treat them as soon as you see them or just powder the perches and around the inside of the house regularly. You will see the mites under things or clumped in corners during the day.
    💷 To find out more about the home business that allows us the time to live our lifestyle visit. uw.partners/steve.and.suzy/pa...
    🔴 Subscribe to our channel with the link below. ruclips.net/user/ThatsWhatWe...
    🎥 Filmed on a Go Pro Hero 9 amzn.to/3moxSIn
    🎤 With Go Pro Media Mod amzn.to/3GCjIeA
  • ХоббиХобби

Комментарии • 39

  • @UKProperPrepper
    @UKProperPrepper 2 месяца назад +1

    I used to keep Rhode Island reds, lovely girls and often laid double yolkers. I'm going to set up in my new place this summer and get some more next spring.

    • @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife
      @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife  2 месяца назад +1

      Awesome 🤩 we hope to move next year and get some more chickens 🐓 too / good luck with your move

  • @annjackson6969
    @annjackson6969 Месяц назад +1

    Thank you best help found , am about to get some chickens and yours is the best video I have found.

  • @rebeccapearman3091
    @rebeccapearman3091 2 года назад +1

    Great video, thank you x

  • @backtonature433
    @backtonature433 2 года назад +1

    Awesome 👌

  • @Rigdawg
    @Rigdawg 2 года назад +4

    Thank y’all for this information! My wife and I have been considering chickens. Very informative and much appreciated!

    • @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife
      @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife  2 года назад +2

      We have had them for years and have no regrets.

    • @Rigdawg
      @Rigdawg 2 года назад +1

      @@ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife The only problem that I will have is my wife (Melanie) is a die hard animal lover, haha! Thank y’all for the advice!!

    • @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife
      @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife  2 года назад +2

      If your wife eats eggs then this could be an opportunity to produce eggs from happier chickens than those that produce the eggs in the shops.
      Good luck and ask us if you want to know anything that wasn’t covered in the video.

    • @Rigdawg
      @Rigdawg 2 года назад +1

      @@ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife Absolutely great point! Thanks so much!! 😊
      Thank y’all for providing information that is easy to understand for us!

    • @Rigdawg
      @Rigdawg 2 года назад

      ❤️

  • @gardenonthemoors
    @gardenonthemoors 2 года назад +2

    Love it! We also chuck in a bit of grass clippings with ours, even if it's just one bucket full and they will scratch around it looking for any insects and things that have been hoovered up.

  • @jeffjones9792
    @jeffjones9792 2 года назад +1

    After the war it was popular to keep a couple of chicken at the end of the garden - combated rationing. Close to the run he grew brassicas. 8 netted, 2 not. The 2 attracted white cabbage butterflies that laid their eggs on them. When they hatched into catapillars he would let the chickens out and they would devour the catapillars. Protein for them, plus some vegetation they liked. His policy of 'share and share alike'!

  • @barbsdee3831
    @barbsdee3831 10 месяцев назад +1

    When do you swap from growers to layers pellets? Do you weigh out the pellets and how much do you give them? Love your wellies ❤️

    • @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife
      @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife  10 месяцев назад +1

      About 16 weeks / I don’t weigh I just fill feeder they will only eat what they need

  • @DancingBeeHoney
    @DancingBeeHoney Год назад +1

    Hi, great video, thank you.
    We are thinking of getting chickens next Easter. I have a lot of trees that would overhang the area I’d be keeping the chickens. Would birds nesting in the trees above the coop be a problem ?
    Thanks.

    • @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife
      @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife  Год назад +1

      The only thing to consider is if you have bird flu in your area so worth checking any guidance for that / in the UK we have government guidance which we comply with

    • @DancingBeeHoney
      @DancingBeeHoney Год назад

      @@ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife Thank you.

  • @PhilipTamhk
    @PhilipTamhk 4 месяца назад +1

    Thanks so much for this nice video! I’m actually a newbie which consider to raise hen in my backyard. Other than the setup, where can we buy chicks or hens for the raise? I’m currently in Birmingham.

    • @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife
      @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife  4 месяца назад

      I found mine by googling it / sadly I don’t know any in your area but am sure there must be some / you can get ex-commercially reared chickens as they only keep them for a year and then get rid of them / our first hens came that way from a free range farm that was replacing their hens

  • @nathanielhoy96
    @nathanielhoy96 Год назад +2

    Do you think paving slabs around the run would deter foxes? The idea being that they'd have to burrow from further away and deeper to get in? I don't know how determined foxes can be haha

  • @TalkingRubbish
    @TalkingRubbish Год назад +1

    Our garden is about half the size of yours, we have a neighbour with a dog, several cats come through the garden and foxes who have tried for months to get in our food bin... I'd love to have chickens but not sure if it would become a nightmare to protect them.

  • @orderofmagnitude-TPATP
    @orderofmagnitude-TPATP 3 месяца назад +1

    Can have the chickens run loose around the garden ever?

    • @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife
      @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife  3 месяца назад

      Yes they just make quite a bit of mess if they do it all the time / I usually keep mine in their run most of the time and then let them out occasionally to run around the garden 🪴 unless there’s restrictions for bird flu then they have to stay in their run

  • @donnamariefinney
    @donnamariefinney 2 месяца назад +1

    Have you ever seen a fox mine are not locked in just in garden unless it flu lockdown had them 7 years live in country never ever seen a fox not sure why

  • @by1067
    @by1067 2 года назад +1

    My burning question. How do you enter the chicken run. You never showed that bit.

    • @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife
      @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife  2 года назад +1

      The door is behind the broken pot in the thumbnail picture. Maybe we can show how we enter in the next video.

  • @jordanbeagle5779
    @jordanbeagle5779 Год назад +1

    Have you considered rescue hens from British Hen Welfare Trust?

  • @mariafraser2241
    @mariafraser2241 2 года назад +1

    Do you ever have any troubles with rats at all

    • @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife
      @ThatsWhatWeCallTheGoodLife  2 года назад

      We have a rat bait station in a corner of the garden to be sure. Keeping the feed in a secure container in the garage is essential and by not over feeding we have found that rats are not a problem.