So this is something I have been thinking about doing for a while now and after some encouragement from my family I have decided to go for it! So here it is, the birth of the Coop DeVille Chronicles. If you are here, you are aware that in July of 2011, my life changed. I became the true Momma Hen. I bought my first flock and coop of domestic chickens. Little did I know how those first 18 girls would be life changing.
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| This is me holding one of the red hens in Cheyenne the day we went to see about buying the coop and flock. This is the first time I have ever held a chicken. |
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| Here is Alex, also holding his first chicken. |
I never, in my wildest dreams, thought I would love a chicken as much as a cat or dog (and if you know me, you know that I LOVE cats) and at times it could be debatable about loving them more than some humans!
So to understand my flock I must first introduce you to chicken math. I started out with 18, but of those 18, only a handful were still laying eggs. Because I was so uneducated about chickens I didn't realize that the flock we bought were mostly freeloaders (I refer to the non-laying hens quite lovingly as "freeloaders"). So within a month I was on the hunt for more girls. I found 11 more young pullets (a female chicken under one year of age) in Loveland, CO through a Craigslist ad. Late one night at the end of July we drove to Loveland and I bought 11 more girls. They were beautiful, a whole range of colors and breeds. I was instantly in love with their fuzzy little butts. They were so young, that many of them still chirped and had not developed full combs or wattles. What followed was a few days of some pecking order challenges, but the new girls became part of the flock quite easily. Also in the first few months we had to send one original girl to the chopping block because she was quite naughty and would not stop eating eggs, we also had one become quite ill and another just die in her sleep. As the word began to spread that I had fresh eggs, the desire to fill the demand for farm fresh eggs began to grow and I quickly decided that I needed more hens.
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| This is a picture I took of the flock in Cheyenne the day we went to meet them for the first time. |
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| And here they are back at my place, sorry for the picture quality, it is not easy to take pictures in the coop. |
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| This old girl is not with us now, but she was from the original flock and was quite old. |
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| These girls came from Loveland, that is Thelma in the back and Lacy in the front. |
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| This is Shoe (because she has "red wings") she is also a Loveland girl. She is called a Blue Laced Red Wyandotte, and that is her pal Lacy in the back ground, a Silver Laced Wyandotte. |
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| This girls are from the original flock and the white girl is a Plymouth Rock and the blond girl in the back is a Buff Orpington, she is a freeloader and is living out her days quite nicely at Coop DeVille Farm. |
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| These girls are also from Loveland, the black and white one is called a Barred Rock and her name is Speedy, she was super fast and very hard to catch as a young girl. The blond girl is another Buff Orpington and she has a twin, I call them the Blond Babies, as I can't tell her and her sister apart. | |
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| Here are some of the Loveland girls settling in the coop. On the roost from left to right is Rosa, Louise, the two Easter Egger sisters and then the green legged white baby. The three to the right all now lay green eggs. |
Craigslist became my friend and I soon found a fella in Greeley, CO who had organic pullets for sale. This story warrants a whole chronicle in and of itself! So the long story in the short version is that we came home from there with ten more girls, including Naked Neck Nancy!
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| Here are some of the girls we bought in Greeley. |
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| They are loaded up and headed home...that is Naked Neck Nancy right in front. |
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| Here they are enjoying some free range time. |
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| The girls are integrating and getting along nicely. |
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| This is Cruella, she is a Splash Austrolorp and is a Greeley girl. | |
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| Here is Naked Neck Nancy. She is a sweetheart. |
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So fast forward to today, December 30, 2011. There are currently 32 girls living a wonderful, spoiled life at the Coop DeVille Farm. They have a camper converted into a coop that we call Cluckingham Palace and the original coop that my dad painted a mural on for the girls, a Cadillac Coup DeVille tail fin in a field of sunflowers. More to come regarding their coops...
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| Here is the mural Bill Anderson (my dad) painted for the girls on the backside of the original coop. |
You must be having fun with your girls!!!!
ReplyDeleteLove the blog and will enjoy following! The eggs are wonderful too!
ReplyDeleteThanks Bill and Melanie! I think it is going to be fun. Can't wait to share more! :)
ReplyDelete