Actually, I should back up and include Mark's comments, because so much of the prep work was his. My contribution was to go to TSC and buy waterers, feeders, heat lamps and bulbs, feed, bedding and so on. Mark was the creative genius that took scrap parts and built a beautiful brooder box. He had the box up and running a week befoer we got thte chickens.
So chickens are pretty easy to take care of when they're in the brooder box. A little food each day, a little water, a little attention. And they do what chickens so naturally - grow. So within a couple weeks what I had was a bunch of funny looking gangly teen-age chickens.
And it was time for them to come out of the brooder box. Mind you, this process only takes a couple of weeks. Fortunately I have a VERY handy husband who had, just in the nick of time, finished building the coop and chicken run. By this time I had had the birds outside a couple of times in a small temporary enclosure and they had a blast pecking around the dirt. What wasn't fun was carrying them in and out of the enclosure. I began to have some doubts.
Our original plan was to let the chickens free range. I began to worry about how I would ever get them back into the coop at night if we did that. I mean, I know IN THEORY chickens return to the roost on their own at night, but frankly, I was a little afraid of the chickens. I mean, who likes being pecked?
Well, obviously, as anyone who ever raised chickens knows, they actually do come home to roost at night. And about fifty thousand other times a day when they get spooked by the wind, or a passing car, or the dog waking up from his nap and stretching his legs, or the screen door opening, or by absolutely nothing at all. They are truly hysterical to watch. And I can no longer go outside barefoot, because they are fascinated with my toes. As food. But they put themselves back to bed each night and that is easy. So now they are around ten weeks and halfway to egg-laying age and so far so good.
Their favorite hangout is at the top of the hill, but they range further afield each day. Just yesterday I came in the back, lower-level door, which was standing open, and found a chicken wandering around the family room. I had to chase her out and back up the hill. It is pretty rare to find a single chicken so far from the rest on her own. They really are flock creatures; it's funny when they all race back to the pen together for no apparent reason, and its gratifying to see them come now when I bring scrap treats out to them. It's just my toes that I need to worry about, and for that there's shoes!



