Everything is moving right along at Dart Creek Farm. The turkey poults and layer chicks have arrived and the broilers are out on the pasture in their movable pen. The sun has shown its face, the grass is getting greener, and the singing birds are starting to return.
I started the pen down in the yard next to the house. I wanted them close for the first few days so I could keep an eye on them and make sure they got settled in without any problems. The pen gets moved once a day after they’ve had a chance to eat all of the fresh greens, worms, and bugs in that area. It will take about a week to make it out of the yard and into the big pasture. They have already gotten used to the process of the house moving to fresh grass.
After researching for many months and reading about various pasture pen designs, I settled on this one. Part of the reason was that I had all the materials on hand already. The 4′x16′ livestock panels and chicken wire came from the old chicken yard I have been slowly deconstructing. The cedar wood for the frame and and door came from my pile of “hippie wood” I got from Idaho a few months ago. The bell waterer came from a set of 5 I bought from someone off eBay (got a tip from a fellow APPPA member) for a really good price. The 5 gallon bucket I picked up from the Rebuilding Center in Portland for 25 cents. While I was there I also bought a sink and and tile to build an outdoor processing station (pictures are on the way). The feeder was made from materials I had laying around, PVC pipe, wood ends, screws, hung from the ceiling with saved bailing twine. The tarps to cover the whole things came from the dwindling pile of horse stall bedding.
Here I just filled the PVC feeder. The chickens are slowly learning to peck the grass and look for bugs, but they go crazy for the natural feed crumbles.
The brooders are all ready for chickens and turkeys.
The turkey poults and layer chicks arrived on the same day. I was very busy putting the finishing touches on the turkey brooder so they would have a nice warm home. Here the turkeys are getting used to their new crib. The blue enclosure is made from the left over piece of barrel from the construction of the automatic chicken plucker. After the broilers are processed at the end of this month, the movable pen will be available for the turkeys to get some fresh pasture grass and bugs.
There is an outer door…
…and an inner door to prevent drafts from entering the brooder. I will eventually install window covers that are hinged and can close them in during bad weather.
Babs (Kim named him when he was young and didn’t know he was a rooster) and his ladies.
The new layer chicks. We got a mix of heavies that lay big brown eggs.
So, now all there is to do is feed, water, and move the pen daily. The Cornish X’s will be processed around the 1st of May and then the daily chicken chores will be fairly easy for Kim, Kaitie, and Dylan to do while I’m recovering from the ‘ol chop o’rama. I’m hoping that by June I will be able to start another batch of broilers and another after that before the season is over.
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April 12th, 2009 at 5:51 pm
Great read Michael!! I’ll be posting pic’s of my finished peep-condo soon!
April 12th, 2009 at 8:29 pm
Super cool!!! You did an awesome job on the chicken tractor. Hippie wood sure came in handy. How many broilers are you raising currently? We just got our this week, yours look like they have a couple weeks jump on ours.
April 18th, 2009 at 9:26 pm
I have about 60 in this pen. About 50 have been reserved for sale. They are voracious eaters, taking about 25lbs of natural crumble feed a day in addition to their fresh pasture goodies. I’m finding that having them on the pasture is not really saving a whole lot in feed cost.