Opossum in the Chicken Coop!

The great chicken nemesis, the opossum, found a way into the coop this evening. Fortunately for my ladies, she was a very young predator. She did manage to frighten my birds into a cackling frenzy, chasing them off their perch and into the run. Scott found her, desperately clutching the wire at the top of the run, trying to find a way out. My years volunteering for a wildlife rehab prepped me for opossum removal (although she was fast and wiggly and I lost her on the first grab). I finally got her, and set her free.

Opossums eat chickens. We’ll have to review the coop in the daylight tomorrow to find the breach. In the meantime, I locked the door to the roosting area. Unfortunately, the opossum will return, and she’ll quadruple in size.

Comments

Urban Chickens Advocates of Nashville Story in The City Paper

Urban Chickens Advocates of Nashville (UCAN) was featured in a City Paper story about the ongoing chicken saga in Nashville. My favorite quote is from Metro Councilman Jim Gotto, who called UCAN’s goal “lofty and noble,” while adding, “the unintended consequences could be disastrous.” What, exactly, could be disastrous about passing legislation that tightly regulates the number of hens a property owner could have? Seriously?

If someone does break the law and crams 50 roosters on a 1/8 acre plot, it won’t be because of any proposed legislation. The pro-chicken bill, which suffered a defeat in 2009, restricted the number of hens to 6, with a minimum area and distance from neighbor’s houses.

There are many comments on the story, mostly written by morons. One of the few informed comments comes from Nash615 who points out:

***

Whenever an opponent to a bill says “well, we don’t have the resources to enforce this” they are also pointing out that we currently don’t have the resources to enforce the current legal state of affairs.

“We don’t want to enforce a more clear law on chickens so don’t vote for it.” is not an argument. By that logic they can’t enforce the current muddy law which says maybe you can and maybe you can’t have chickens.

This is an argument-sounding statement, but it’s not an argument. In fact it’s basically saying nothing other than “we can’t enforce the laws we have on the books, so why bother changing them?”

Which is just another way of saying “the laws on the books are basically meaningless.”

I recommend that if you want to have chickens you go ahead and get chickens. Either laws forbidding them won’t be enforced (probably), or the “argument” against clarifying the rules is worthless, in which case you can now push to legalize your reasonable desire to keep chickens in the USD.

As a friend recently said on this topic, “civil disobedience is greatly underrated.”

***

I could not have expressed this better, kudos Nash615, whoever you are.

Comments

Close Call With a Sharp-Shinned Hawk

I can hear my hens squawking from their coop. Josie had a very close call with a sharp-shinned hawk this morning. I was standing about five feet away when it landed on her back! It bailed on the chicken-breakfast-project quickly, probably because I was there. SSH’s are quite small, so I am not sure it could have carried her off. Josie didn’t seem to know what was happening, just let out a “WTF?” squawk and made her way back into the coop. I need to check her back for injuries today, just as soon as I finish hosting my next webinar. Ah, life in the burbs.

Comments

Register for the Upcoming “Chickens as Pets” Workshop

Backyard Chickens Workshop
Saturday, April 2, 12 noon
Where: East Nashville Cooperative Ministry (807 Main St. 37206)
Cost: Free (but we’ll “pass the hat” for our presenter)

Ryan has been a backyard shepherd for some time now and has grown a strong flock (actual number kept anonymous) of heritage breeds. AS PETS, he admires their colors, personalities, and educational opportunities provided to his children. Ryan will have blueprints for his tractor coop that he designed to be cost and space efficient. If we are lucky we may build one. We will be comparing and contrasting classic practices, exposing misnomers and discussing breed recommendations.

sign up:  http://growingourfuture.blogspot.com/search/label/workshops

Comments

Another Flock Joins the Neighborhood

Another neighbor had joined the chicken club! Lucky for her flock, their property exceeds 5 acres so the city cannot swoop down and take her birds. Check out her cute setup.

 

Comments

« Previous Page« Previous entries « Previous Page · Next Page » Next entries »Next Page »