A Walkway Feeds Our Chickens!?!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 16 июл 2024
  • www.edibleacres.org
    ruclips.net/channel/edibl... - Join as an Edible Acres member for access to members live Question and Answer sessions and to support our work!
    www.paypal.me/edibleacres - A simple and direct way to ‘tip’ to help support the time and energy we put into making our videos. Thanks so much!
    Edible Acres is a full service permaculture nursery located in the Finger Lakes area of NY state. We grow all layers of perennial food forest systems and provide super hardy, edible, useful, medicinal, easy to propagate, perennial plants for sale locally or for shipping around the country…
    www.edibleacres.org/purchase - Your order supports the research and learning we share here on youtube.
    We also offer consultation and support in our region or remotely. www.edibleacres.org/services
    Happy growing!

Комментарии • 144

  • @yLeprechaun
    @yLeprechaun Год назад +19

    I'm careful to not let my chickens see these videos of your chicken yard. Else they would all be on the next greyhound bus to Ithica, NY no doubt! In other words, my attempt to replicate is discouragingly failing. :(
    But I have a lot of things in nursery beds, trying to get them up to size to insert. Hopefully this fall, at dormancy, they will be ready to plant the edges.
    I also have goats that share the space, which is a very sharp double edged sword. 😏

  • @nm72488
    @nm72488 Год назад +5

    Highly recommend watching Chicken TV with youtubes closed caption - it keeps thinking that the birdsong is "Music" and the street noise is "Applause"! A delightful accident :)

  • @frederickheard2022
    @frederickheard2022 Год назад +35

    When grain/seeds break dormancy, enzymes convert starch into sugar (brewers know this as “malting”) so the embryo will have a huge energy boost to jumpstart growth. (This is why wheatgrass is sweet, btw). The sweet shoots, malty endosperm and rapidly growing root might contribute to the sweetness. The rapid uptake of excess nitrogen/ammonium must also help.

  • @gardenfairygodmother1893
    @gardenfairygodmother1893 Год назад +5

    Hello from the UK. Came for the chicken TV and was not disappointed.

  • @birchmoonfarm101
    @birchmoonfarm101 Год назад +3

    I love chicken talk

  • @shannonsexton8921
    @shannonsexton8921 Год назад +28

    Root exudates feed bacteria and fungi so nutrients are close by. This is known to promote aerobic decomposition. Good work!

  • @sixeses
    @sixeses Год назад +2

    Thank you for chicken TV and all you do

  • @rosea830
    @rosea830 Год назад +9

    Have you thought about starting some pumpkin seeds under crates for them? Mine love it when a pumpkin vine wanders into the run and I think that's going to be my project this week. That and some amaranth and sunflowers.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад +3

      Great idea, we should be exploring that!

  • @pibbz13
    @pibbz13 Год назад +2

    So much rich soil in the making, gorgeous!

  • @pikkusieluinen
    @pikkusieluinen Год назад +9

    2:03 I love how the ladies just gather around you. Wonderful place for chickens.

  • @jessicaj8148
    @jessicaj8148 Год назад +2

    I wish my rooster was as quiet as yours

  • @allonesame6467
    @allonesame6467 Год назад +2

    Sir Rooster de Banty has the funniest curtailed "crow"! So much abundance!

  • @trumpetingangel
    @trumpetingangel Год назад +8

    My hens join me whenever I'm planting, and they always peck at the soil (or clay). I have assumed there are tiny critters that they can spot but are invisible to me. My fervent hope is that they are eating ticks and tick nymphs!

  • @reneelalala7690
    @reneelalala7690 Год назад +2

    love the chicken TV always!

  • @adam9755
    @adam9755 Год назад +2

    Love the chicken TV!

  • @woodworks371
    @woodworks371 Год назад +5

    So lovely to see (and hear) such happy chickens. Your composting system will be a game-changer for the way we’re doing things on our homestead. Thank you for sharing it. 🙏

  • @amnajoudi5393
    @amnajoudi5393 9 месяцев назад +1

    This is a great model, thanks for being so inspirational!

  • @lunabeta3516
    @lunabeta3516 Год назад +6

    I accidentally learned by dropping seed in my compost they'd grow and my chickens would eat it. My compost is in the chicken area. I sure wish I could get some grains like what you have. Those are beautiful grains to throw.

  • @dimitrinoahutz9547
    @dimitrinoahutz9547 Год назад +2

    I just loove it❤

  • @lauracondon5224
    @lauracondon5224 Год назад +3

    I love the gentle chicken sounds.

  • @brusombear3823
    @brusombear3823 Год назад +5

    Looks great. I'm in central MO less then .5in rain since mothers day getting very brown and crunchy :(

  • @jlazelle1
    @jlazelle1 Год назад +7

    My compost takes 2 years and gets a final bulk age. I got the pile together a month ago and there are sunflowers sprouting all along the base. There are a lot of unexpected benefits when you let life happen.

  • @austind2784
    @austind2784 Год назад +8

    I know Brooklyn isn't necessarily in your neighborhood, but there's a mushroom farm Smallhold that I believe sends their mushroom blocks to the waste stream. If convenient getting those blocks in the compost and chicken yard would be very beneficial.

  • @TheTrock121
    @TheTrock121 Год назад +3

    Hens do have a sweet tooth er beak. Ours love watermelon and pineapple.

  • @aaronbaron3155
    @aaronbaron3155 Год назад +3

    Having all that seed>>>>>>>>new pasture is a fortuitous thing for you guys. That worked out so well.. 7:49

  • @reneelalala7690
    @reneelalala7690 Год назад +2

    hi! Every fall I walk around with a mix seeds from the garden and throw them over walkways and woodchip areas. Its always neat to see what grows in the spring and how the landscape evolves year after year.

  • @mystique6444
    @mystique6444 Год назад +3

    I would love to see a video on how you deal with all rodents/ pests like voles, rats, mice, birds, slugs and snails that are inevitable when you grow food or raise animals. Is it just sheer volume of planting that allows anything to grow despite the nature? I calculated i have lost a minimum of 50-70%of what I have planted to one or another of these this year, and it's a GOOD year. Those grains wouldn't have lasted a week or to have time to even sprout in my yard.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад +2

      There are huge numbers of those kinds of creatures around to be sure, but I think the scale of what we offer up may be enough to have it work out?

  • @simouWassim-mc8ci
    @simouWassim-mc8ci 9 месяцев назад

    I love the gentle chicken sounds

  • @MrGigi-dz9cv
    @MrGigi-dz9cv Год назад +2

    Those seedlings, are rich in proteins.

  • @strictlyconservative8777
    @strictlyconservative8777 11 месяцев назад +1

    I absolutely love your system. I will use this and I thank you for your wonderfully relaxing and educational videos!

  • @LoisELewis
    @LoisELewis 3 месяца назад

    Love your helthy, happy c&ickens. They love what you provide for their food, love being around you.😊😊😊😊😊😊

  • @jessicaj8148
    @jessicaj8148 Год назад +2

    I have a bunch or barley seed ibises to use to make forage but then that got put on back burner with dog care. I might find an area out back to see if the barley will sprout for the hens.

  • @MistressOP
    @MistressOP Год назад +2

    Been having the worms eat the microgreens mats after we cut the greens. They like it a lot.VERY COOL!

  • @shimilangagardens1804
    @shimilangagardens1804 Год назад +1

    wheat grass shots gets you high! Better than espresso.

  • @DustyDingoPhotos
    @DustyDingoPhotos Год назад

    For those contemplating similar, another worthy consideration is the breed of the chooks (chickens). If you can possibly get hold of some Hamburg hens, you'll immediately lessen the amount of feed they need: Hamburgs are first-order foragers and reportedly eat as much as 2/3 less of actual chook food. And . . . ummm . . . they like flying too, so clipping a wing every now and again is small price to pay for these magnificent chooks 🙂

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад

      Good reminder to explore diversity in the chickens you work with

  • @BadniMohamad-xp4ku
    @BadniMohamad-xp4ku 8 месяцев назад

    I love how the ladies just gather around you. Wonderful place for chickens.

  • @imanesm1180
    @imanesm1180 9 месяцев назад

    Yes good continuation 👌

  • @StackingAbundance
    @StackingAbundance Год назад +5

    I love it, your chicken yard is so full of life. Off topic, but will you be selling any sea berries this year? The elders and currants i got from you are doing great!

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад +5

      We hope to be propagating enough to offer them in a real way for next spring. We'll have to see how it unfolds!

  • @dotsouthard2980
    @dotsouthard2980 Год назад +5

    Love this method, Sean. This would be harder in a desert environment but still doable. I’m wondering, though, do you ever have a problem with rats? If so, how do you deal with them? Thanks

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад +1

      We have seen rats but they haven't been an issue with this situation

  • @Randeb86
    @Randeb86 Год назад +1

    I’m a new subscriber and loved this video, I have five hens, only two laying, three are younger, you have a beautiful diverse bunch of hens, they are beautiful and healthy looking, well done !❤

  • @petrosros
    @petrosros Год назад +1

    Have you ever tried seeding mats of purslane, it is not native to the UK but prefers Southern Europe ;however, the seeds grow vigorously here in the summer. Why I mention it, is because the eggs produced from birds that eat it are considered the best free rang eggs in Europe, and the chickens love it. One seed will give you a near metre wide, low growing succulent type mat. Humans can eat it as well, although personally I am not fond of it, in Greece where it is annual and abundant, people cook it as a veg.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад +1

      Great reminder to appreciate purslane! We have it growing in our garden and enjoy eating it, it would be interesting to actually save seed and be deliberate about setting it out in new places!

  • @samirdadi3569
    @samirdadi3569 9 месяцев назад

    Very good 👍

  • @beefandpork
    @beefandpork Год назад +5

    Do you have deep litter in the coop and where do you insert the coop bedding into this system when it comes time to clean out the coop? I would not be surprised to learn you’ve mentioned this in several videos, but I can’t think of a time when I’ve come across the explanation and I’ve watched a lot of your chicken videos.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад +2

      We do do deep bedding... When we clean it out we try to find a place in the garden that needs a gnarly mulch and put it down directly. Sometimes it just comes out and gets mixed into the pathways. Turns to compost pretty fast that way

  • @gardenboots7464
    @gardenboots7464 7 месяцев назад

    WONDERFUL 🌱

  • @ChipShotWoodworking
    @ChipShotWoodworking Год назад +10

    Love watching you, especially your zero waste chicken strategies. I’m aiming to feed my chickens like you do: food forest, food scraps and grains from locally sourced grocery stores, (plus the occasional handful of commercial feed) and I’m wondering if you do any separation whatsoever. I’m finding myself separating the known foods that aren’t good for them like avocado and raw beans from the totes I get, worried that my chickens (3 months old) are too young to know the difference. What do you think? Should I continue separating, or is a little toxicity here and there worth the education the birds will receive? Thanks!

  • @creekwoodfarmandhomesteadc6440
    @creekwoodfarmandhomesteadc6440 Год назад +2

    👍

  • @evam.3351
    @evam.3351 Год назад +3

    Great update. I am just about to start a composting system with our hens. We have 24 older and 20 younger ones on about 2000m2 in Spain. Here it is impossible or unaffordable to get organic compost. I was wondering if you could do another update on the composting system for "summer😅". 1doubt I have in doing these compost paths is if the compost gets hot enough for the seeds inside. How is the experience with your compost in terms of weeds in the beds where you use it?

  • @VickyYoung-qg7fd
    @VickyYoung-qg7fd 11 месяцев назад +1

    Its a great idea i will try it so they have some fresh green in there run

  • @hugshoney3409
    @hugshoney3409 11 месяцев назад

    So satisfying to see the lovely ladies singing while they work. Always enjoy the chicken tv. ❤️

  • @DjasmineBen-vt3xj
    @DjasmineBen-vt3xj 9 месяцев назад

    شكرا لك على مجهوداتك برافو

  • @cherylbertolini3140
    @cherylbertolini3140 Год назад +3

    how close are the chicken to your house?

  • @lpmoron6258
    @lpmoron6258 Год назад

    When you only partially cover the seeds, it makes your hens work for their meals. This as to their feeling of contentment. Less opportunity to squabble.

  • @yassinetorchi2505
    @yassinetorchi2505 9 месяцев назад

    Great

  • @TaylorinShirewood
    @TaylorinShirewood Год назад +1

    Could you maybe quickly list the plants you have growing within the enclosure, think I saw what might be a sea buckthorn, would love to know!

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад +2

      Red and Black Currants
      Sea Buckthorn
      Goji
      Thornless Black Berry
      a few Honeyberry types
      grapes
      some other stuff I'm forgetting :)

    • @TaylorinShirewood
      @TaylorinShirewood Год назад

      @@edibleacres That's okay! Thanks so much :D

  • @dawnteskey3259
    @dawnteskey3259 10 месяцев назад

    Amazing! I love being able to be an observer to your journey. Love the chickens too!

  • @ilinelona2180
    @ilinelona2180 9 месяцев назад

    Nice

  • @cherifichihebeddine7026
    @cherifichihebeddine7026 9 месяцев назад

    Good

  • @JumpingSpider37
    @JumpingSpider37 Год назад +3

    Wow! Great stuff! In general, what’s the solar access for your chicken yard? I’d love to try this but the run area is pretty deeply shaded.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад +1

      Pretty darn shaded in this chicken yard. The sprouting process doesn't need huge light, you are mainly getting them just to sprout and grow a little, not fully mature...

  • @CookBrookCountryLife
    @CookBrookCountryLife Год назад

    Always learning from your channel, and getting new ideas. Thank you!

  • @rahmazarouk4649
    @rahmazarouk4649 9 месяцев назад

    Waw nice

  • @wintersfamilyfarm4366
    @wintersfamilyfarm4366 Год назад

    I’m moving and I am taking all
    My “chicken compost” with me. Lol 5.5 hrs away. Hahahaha.

  • @riverwhitman4317
    @riverwhitman4317 Год назад +1

    I love watching your chickens! How big of an area do you have for your chickens. I just got 15 and would love to not buy too much grain from bags. Thanks!!!

  • @paulasmith4933
    @paulasmith4933 9 месяцев назад

    Sean i have been watching for a while! Thank you! I am starting with just two chickens, gifted to me. I am sprouting lentils they love them. Spreading the sprouts around where i want them to work more. Also growing wheat, oats and barley grasses in trays. That is also working good. When i heard in this video you had 60 chickens! I was wondering the amount of outside space they had. Plus more about their coop. Please.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  9 месяцев назад

      They have about .1 acre in the winter and .2 in the summer.
      We can talk about their coop in a video at some point

  • @lunarminx
    @lunarminx 11 месяцев назад

    I just love their area and how you put down the seeds to be eaten or grow. I do the same in my bearded dragon tank for the clean up crew, two kinds of isopods, springtails and the mealworms and the beetles. This past time i didn't soak the mung beans and lentiles, just broke up the substrate and sowed on top and sprayed down twice a day. After a week I turned them over and did a mixed of small microgreen seeds. Half the tank is arid and the plant side is the rest. I will have a field of powdered orange isopods just covering the plant side out in the open, eating away. Have you ever seeded black soldier fly larvae into the compost? The chickens will love them too.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  11 месяцев назад

      Our climate is just not warm enough to host BSFL in a reliable way so I've tried a few years but given up. Maybe its work exploring again...

  • @sweaterdoll
    @sweaterdoll Год назад +3

    A friend gave us a few pounds of field corn but I thought I would have to grind it (well, put it in a cloth and use a hammer on it because I don't have a grain mill), but I hadn't thought to soak it. How long does it need to soak before it's edible whole?

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад

      Corn sprouts in the summer after about 2 days or so

  • @gangofgreenhorns2672
    @gangofgreenhorns2672 Год назад +2

    How has your duckweed projects panned out? Might try to grow a bunch of my own.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад +1

      We haven't kept up with those experiments as much as I would have liked...

    • @gangofgreenhorns2672
      @gangofgreenhorns2672 Год назад

      @@edibleacres I'm doing some now. Recently dug a duck pond with a bog, and am using their kiddie pools for duck weed. Will see how it works, Have fence around them for now. Day 2.

  • @hojofiihfogo8907
    @hojofiihfogo8907 8 месяцев назад

    💚💚💚💚

  • @MostefaSlh-th4pu
    @MostefaSlh-th4pu 9 месяцев назад

    👍👍

  • @YouceFBrh-ep9xy
    @YouceFBrh-ep9xy 9 месяцев назад

    👍👍👍

  • @mickalaloeffelbein4935
    @mickalaloeffelbein4935 Год назад +2

    Do you ever have problems with rats?

  • @AbderrezakBarkat-tp6tt
    @AbderrezakBarkat-tp6tt 9 месяцев назад

    👏👏

  • @BadniMohamad-xp4ku
    @BadniMohamad-xp4ku 8 месяцев назад

    Fini good

  • @laroussihanane8959
    @laroussihanane8959 9 месяцев назад

    👌👌👌

  • @DawnBarb
    @DawnBarb Год назад

    Heelllloooooo lay-dees!

  • @ZinaguendouzMimi-md2td
    @ZinaguendouzMimi-md2td 9 месяцев назад

    😍😍😍

  • @FryingPanFarm
    @FryingPanFarm Год назад +1

    how do you prevent all the grain and seed you have stored from getting moldy? I'm sure you keep the bins under a roof/out of direct weather but I imagine its quite humid in the summers.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад

      If the bins are completely dry and keep out every drop of rain it seems to store the seeds with no issues

  • @kerem7546
    @kerem7546 Год назад

    do you have any suggestions for keeping weevil populations down in your storage bins? some suggestions i've been giver are storing grain in an air tight container then adding a couple ounces of dry ice (CO2) and the other is bringing the grain down to 0 degrees F for a few days to break their life cycle.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад +1

      Yikes, yeah, I'm not sure I have good suggestions there, I don't know how to be helpful. I wonder if dietary ready diatomaceous earth could be put to use as a dessicant for the weevils?

  • @hjs9197
    @hjs9197 Год назад +1

    New subscriber! I’m wondering do you leave some stuff out like tomatoes plants or you just trow everything in there and they’ll leave the stuff thats toxic? I would love this system but im scared i trow something in there they shouldn’t eat because I’m not aware of it.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад +2

      If we know it isn't great for chickens we try to avoid putting it in, AND we aren't very intense about it... That said, we aren't putting tomato plants or raw potatoes or coffee grinds in there when we can avoid it. If some sneaks through the chickens are smart about it, but it's nice to avoid.

  • @ZinaguendouzMimi-md2td
    @ZinaguendouzMimi-md2td 9 месяцев назад

    😍😍😍😍

  • @salihasaliha287
    @salihasaliha287 8 месяцев назад

    جميل

  • @mouradtadji2496
    @mouradtadji2496 9 месяцев назад

    جيد

  • @user-px1ms7kc9k
    @user-px1ms7kc9k 9 месяцев назад

    ممتاز

  • @bekkoucheibrahim2266
    @bekkoucheibrahim2266 9 месяцев назад

    💐💐💐🧡

  • @TaliaBoukassi-nh3sc
    @TaliaBoukassi-nh3sc 9 месяцев назад

    جميل جدا

  • @aphillips5376
    @aphillips5376 10 месяцев назад

    How do you prevent rats from moving in with all the food scraps and soaked grains on the ground?

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  10 месяцев назад

      Wow, winecaps growing around marble, that would be a neat look to be sure!

  • @leimckethan8083
    @leimckethan8083 Год назад

    Do you ever have an issue with mosquitoes or mosquito larvae in your tanks and water troughs?

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад

      Sometimes, but we can always dump them out

  • @abdelwahabbarkat4534
    @abdelwahabbarkat4534 9 месяцев назад

    🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹

  • @SlimanSliman-mr7yr
    @SlimanSliman-mr7yr 9 месяцев назад

    جميل جداً

  • @user-gp6kp9mg6y
    @user-gp6kp9mg6y 9 месяцев назад

    💯💯💯💯💯💯👍👍👍👍

  • @essentialcomforts2166
    @essentialcomforts2166 Год назад

    How do you keep flies down? Also, do you clip their wings so they don't get out of the fence? How tall is your fence?
    Maybe not related but I notice that when plants start to root in a vase, the water no longer turns nasty.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад +1

      Fence is 6' tall, we don't clip wings and they don't escape, flies lay eggs and the chickens love fly larvae so it works well!

    • @essentialcomforts2166
      @essentialcomforts2166 Год назад

      @@edibleacres oh ok thank you! I had read flies could cause trouble with their vents so I was concerned.

  • @mounirait4939
    @mounirait4939 9 месяцев назад

    Salut tout le monde

  • @MohammedRefas-qc9ew
    @MohammedRefas-qc9ew 8 месяцев назад

    😍💜💜💜👍

  • @BadniMohamad-xp4ku
    @BadniMohamad-xp4ku 8 месяцев назад

    تربية دواجن

  • @lolitabonita08
    @lolitabonita08 Год назад +1

    one thing. i noticed that there is not worms when u disturbe the soil...is that normal?

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад

      There are worms, could just be a lull in one spot or another

  • @Yah-xn1qz
    @Yah-xn1qz 9 месяцев назад

    تربية دجاجة

  • @jknijff
    @jknijff Год назад

    Did you ever had problems with rats? I’ve setup a similar system but it just attracts rats. It’s smaller, I only have 4 chickens. It worked for some time though.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад

      Rats show up once in a while but they have been helpful mainly

    • @jknijff
      @jknijff Год назад

      Helpful? How? By the way, great channel! Big fan!

  • @Youdontknowmeson1324
    @Youdontknowmeson1324 Год назад

    Sorry that this doesn’t have to do with this video but What is the best permaculture or rare plant nurseries in Massachusetts also will you sell Perenial kales.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  Год назад

      Maybe tripplebrookfarm.com is very worth checking out?
      We may offer Perennial Kale, we'll have to see how our propagation work unfolds there

    • @Youdontknowmeson1324
      @Youdontknowmeson1324 Год назад

      @@edibleacres I went to his place he had rare plants I couldn’t understand him so I left he was nice just didn’t talk to us at all I found other rare nurseries that were better russels gardens, Mahoney’s, Logee’s greenhouse, morning star nursery Vermont. Morning star nursery guy was much better and had rarer things cactus, Korean mulberries, himlayan mayapples, fruit bushes he talks very well. Do you have any other places in mass or northeast near mass thank you for the response. Logee’s was also very good they had rare fruits worth trying to grow tomarillo, hardy pineapple guava, schisandra vine, rare figs. Russels garden had cold hardy bananas I bought 12 sea kale plants from them I would have never even thought they would sell them.

    • @Youdontknowmeson1324
      @Youdontknowmeson1324 Год назад

      The guy was nice in all but and he had a beautiful plants and stuff but he couldn’t talk to us I feel sorry for him but sometimes places need good and bad reviews. The guy at morning star nursery was like the guy in south Hampton he had a lot of knowledge I think you would like there very similar.

  • @bearnaff9387
    @bearnaff9387 Год назад +2

    It astounds me how you're able to turn these waste streams and low-cost ingredients into, for lack of a better phrase, living capital that you then turn into products for sale. I have a feeling that if one were able to properly estimate the value of your permaculture as capital (in terms of its ability to foster production), you would be paying into a much higher tax bracket.

  • @rabehghellai8581
    @rabehghellai8581 9 месяцев назад

    T

  • @Abderrazek778
    @Abderrazek778 9 месяцев назад

    Gg