We all like our freedom, do we not? While ultimate freedom comes from our
Creator, The Declaration of Independence, The Constitution, and the Bill of
Rights are documents that specifically state freedoms that Americans enjoy. On Our
Maker’s Acres Family Farm, our cows, goats, and chickens have no such documents
tendering them freedom of movement.
However, they are all free to roam on a 3 acre pasture. While it is not enormous, the amount of land
they have to range is ample for their needs.
They are all healthy and well fed.
There are two hens that feel the need to express their
independence from arbitrary borders and fences.
They migrate hither and yon, setting a bad example for their law-abiding
feathered friends. I’ve caught them and
trimmed their wings, but it has proven unsuccessful in keeping them within the
confines of the territory we’ve established as their free range. The Aracauna hen roams around the yard and
doesn’t really bother anything.
The Barred Rock hen on the other hand, is a real
nuisance. She gets out by a mysterious
way that we haven’t witnessed and makes a beeline for our blueberry bushes,
scratching away all of the mulch from the base of the plants, searching for
worms and bugs to eat. You can see where
she has scratched the area clean below.
I’ve tried to rake it back up, but much of it is scattered and can’t be
recovered. Argghhh!
Doggone Hen! |
When I chase her she is small enough to be able to wiggle
her way through the holes in the hog wire that makes up our perimeter
fence. She looks back over her shoulder and I'm convinced that I see her smirk, making fun of me while I shake my fist at her. Well, I’ll just have to cover the
holes with a smaller sized mesh.
Obviously, it wouldn’t be cost-effective to do this around the entire
perimeter, but maybe if I get 50 feet of fence, and overlay the existing
hogwire, that would work? Let’s
see. Russ and I wired a 50 foot roll of
the 2 x 4 inch welded wire over the bigger hog wire as you can see below. This had a price tag of $65.
Putting a smaller mesh fence over the hog wire |
Did it work?
No. The darn hen was out again
the next day, scratching and generally just causing mayhem. The trouble is, her
scratching the mulch away from the blueberries has exposed the root system, drying out the roots, and is
beginning to kill one of the bushes…
Oh No! |
Okay, so now I’m mad.
We’ve got to do something about this!
I’m not going to let her kill our blueberry bushes. First, I need to purchase more mulch to cover
the roots. At a total cost of $9.96, I
purchased 4 bags of Cypress mulch.
4 bags of mulch |
Benjamin worked to distribute the mulch around the
exposed root systems, covering them so they don't dry out anymore.
We have to stop her. Since we can’t see
exactly where she’s escaping, I’m assuming that maybe she’s hopping up on the
water trough and then jumping over the fence to get out. Let’s test that hypothesis. I have some more of that welded wire fencing that
I’ll temporarily block off the section above the water trough as a process of
elimination. We’ll see if that works:
Temporary Blockade |
Did it work?
No. Our fence is as porous as our Southern Border. I texted Tricia this
afternoon to learn that the fugitive hen escaped again. Okay, now I’m really upset. I have one more idea. The bull pen that we built has 4 x 4
openings. She can’t fit through there. But the two gates contain wide spacings that
goats and chickens can get through. I’ll
wire the 2 x 4 welded wire over the gates this afternoon and place her in the bull
pen.
What happens if she escapes again? I’ve considered that. In fact, I was going to go to the hardware
store today and purchase another roll of wire, but then reconsidered. At some point economics come into play. I fear that the cost of fencing and mulch has
already exceeded the benefits of this girl’s egg laying. Barred Rock hens are known as a good dual
production bird. That means that they
are prized for both their meat and eggs.
We’ve experienced the latter contribution she gives us on a daily
basis. If she is unable to be confined
in the bull pen and escapes again, we will enjoy the former!
The dead blueberry bush may result in a dead hen... |
Barred Rock Hen: You have been officially warned. Don’t mess with our blueberry bushes again!
If you do, well… I
guess I can best communicate the consequence with a limerick:
There once was a fugitive barred rock hen,
Who liked to escape the fence.
When I saw the dead blueberry bush, it made me really
wince.
I spent $74.96 to keep the hen from wandering to and fro,
If the hen escapes and scratches again, she’ll become a
nice…
GUMBO!
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