Carey Hb

+ Follow
since May 06, 2020
Merit badge: bb list bbv list
For More
Apples and Likes
Apples
Total received
In last 30 days
0
Forums and Threads

Recent posts by Carey Hb

Skandi Rogers wrote:Just don't plant anything woody where the chickens will be and it will be very simple to bushhog all the "weeds" down and resow with grass seed if you need to turn it back into something resembling a lawn. remember chickens do like grass as well so you can just have a mix of things with grass and then just mowing it will make it look acceptable again.

6-10 chickens do you have 10 people in your household? that's going to be a huge amount of eggs if you are just two.



Thank you so much! That's great advice.

I have seen yards where creeping ground cover has completely taken over a part of the lawn, and I wouldn't know how to repair it (personally, I think it looks nice) without tearing it out to bare ground and planting grass from scratch.

May I ask what "bushog" means? Like I said, super new!

We are a family of four, I eat 4-6 eggs a day just on my own lol. But maybe fewer layers and instead have some broilers? I'm still researching. :)
4 years ago
Very new, but excited to start!

Moving to a place in the country. First time homeowners, hopefully first-time chicken owners next spring.

We'll have a little under two acres, the backyard is basically one big flat lawn that backs up to farmland. I'd like to try paddock shift with a small flock of layers (maybe 6-10) and I'd love to grow plants in the paddocks for them to eat such as clover, dandelions, alfalfa, etc. But I also don't want to devalue the property, since we may very well sell and move in the future.

I'm planning on designing a handsome layout to the chicken zone and garden so it still looks nice, but it will definitely not just be a big lawn anymore. The neighbors have chickens and goats, and across the street is a full-blown farm, so growing things in the backyard would not be odd for that area.

But a large patch full of "weeds" is another matter.

If I plant things for my chickens to graze, how difficult will it be to "reset" that area when/if it comes time to sell?

Can there be a large square area that's just not conventional lawn, or would that be a problem for a potential buyer? (Maybe a better question for our realtor lol)

Thanks so much!
4 years ago