Ex-battery hens who've come out of their shells

Lucy Oates gave some battery hens a new home. She reports on the joys and challenges of keeping poultry in your garden.

Once it was the norm to have a few laying hens in your backyard. Now we are become increasingly aware of where our food comes from and more of us want our own taste of the good life, hen keeping is enjoying a resurgence.

Almost a year ago, we re-homed four ex-battery hens and then added a further three hens, given to us by friends. Having grown up on a farm, I knew roughly what it entailed, but the past few months have been a voyage of discovery.

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One of the biggest joys has been watching our four ex-battery hens adjust to free range life. When they arrived, they had feathers missing, pale floppy combs and were generally very weak and lethargic. Now they have bright red combs, glossy, fluffy feathers and are full of energy.

I like sitting in the garden on a warm spring day listening to them contentedly clucking as they root around among the pebbles looking for insects and other morsels. A couple may enjoy a dust bath in the soil, a natural way for them to remove parasites from their feathers. One thing I'd not expected was for them be such charming and amusing characters. Hens make surprisingly endearing pets and, once they've got used to you, are happy being stroked and handled.

We give our hens layers' pellets, a high protein feed available from most animal feed suppliers, and a little corn each day. But they will happily wolf down any leftover bread, pasta, rice, cooked potatoes, vegetables and fruit.

They even love cold baked beans and particularly enjoy pecking the last bits of flesh from the skin of a melon before using it as a drinking vessel from which to sip every last drop of juice.

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When there's an abundance of herbs in the garden during the summer months, I often pull a bunch of mint, lemon balm, basil or oregano for them. They go crazy for the soft, flavoursome leaves and, apparently, you should be able to detect a subtle taste of herbs in the eggs that they produce.

If you're protective of your flower beds and lawn, it's best to section off an area for your hens to minimise damage. They love nothing better than scratching and digging in the soil.

We've also learnt the hard way what great escape artists hens can be and to make sure that their run is completely secure. I was reduced to tears when our marauding flock managed to find a way out and cheerfully destroyed our newly-planted vegetable patch.

Despite that, keeping hens is rewarding and they ask for very little in return for the abundance of fresh eggs. We've had a constant supply since our hens arrived, even through the darkest and coldest days of winter. At this time of year – the peak laying season – our seven girls give us between 25 and 35 eggs a week.

Buying your hens

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It's well worth considering re-homing ex-battery hens, which will be little more than a year old when you receive them. Visit the British Hen Welfare Trust's website to find out more – www.bhwt.org.uk

Even in a small garden you will have enough room for a couple of hens. If you live in a built-up area it's not a good idea to add a cockerel to your flock, its crowing will disturb neighbours. Unlike wild birds, your hens won't need a cockerel to produce eggs.

You can buy hens from a local livestock market or find them advertised for sale in poultry and farming magazines.

Accommodation

Although you'll find all manner of different coops and runs on the market, all they really need is a secure, waterproof hen house with perches and nest boxes.

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In an urban area you need to safeguard your hens against foxes and other predators. We converted an old dog run and kennel for ours so that they can be locked up safely at night. During the day we open the door of the run so that they can forage in the garden.

We raised the dog kennel up off the ground, adding a ramp for the hens to climb up, and fitted out the inside with nest boxes and perches. As hens tend to excrete mainly when they're roosting at night, be prepared to clean the hen house out at least once a week. Hen droppings can always be put to good use as a fertiliser for your vegetable patch.

If you do decide to let your hens roam free in your garden during the day, you may want to clip their flight feathers to stop them from flying up on to fences and escaping. All you need to do is trim the ends of the main feathers on one wing to unbalance the hen so that it can't take off, taking care not to cut too close to the quills.

Food

Hens should have a supply of fresh, clean water at all times and special drinking containers can be bought relatively cheaply. Each hen needs around 100 grammes of food per day, which could be layer's pellets or mash, or grain.

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Free range hens will supplement their diet by foraging in your garden,

but confined hens will need grit to help them digest food and crushed shells so that they get the calcium they need to form strong shells on their eggs.

You can buy both from your local animal feed supplier. You can add variety to their diet by giving them scraps from the kitchen, although raw potato, citrus peel and banana skins should be avoided. Bunches of nettles and even grass clippings will be gratefully received, particularly if your hens are confined during the day.

Useful reading

Hens in the Garden, Eggs in the Kitchen by Charlotte Popescu has been an invaluable resource, particularly in the early days when it reassured us that the squabbles that arise from establishing a pecking order are part and parcel of a hen's daily life.

There is also lots of useful information on keeping hens on the British Hen Welfare Trust's website – www.bhwt.org.uk

CW 12/6/10