Foraging Breeds
From books and online sources, these breeds can free range and forage much of their own food:
- Austrolorp
- Brown leghorn
- Buff Orpington
- Dominique
- Hamburg
- Leghorn
- New Hampshire Red
- Rhode Island Red
- Plymouth Rock
- Silver-Laced Wyandotte
- Sussex
- White Wyandotte
- Ameraucana
- Black Sex Link
- Red Sex Link
- Sussex
Best Chicken Pen Method
We've used a single largish free range area of ~3000 square feet for six hens. They keep the area fairly well denuded of ground covers, though we have successfully established trees and shrubs and a few herbaceous plants. The next time I design for chickens I'll adopt a rotating pasture method. I agree with most of the points made in Paul Wheaton's article, "concerns about the way most people raise chickens".Chicken Tolerant Plants
Once we established these plants, our chickens did not eat or scratch them to death:Latin name | Common name | Notes |
Mentha x piperita | Peppermint | |
Sium sisarum | Skirret | Chickens don't eat it; not yet verified whether they'll scratch it to death |
Hemerocallis sp | Daylilies | |
Chenopodium bonus-henricus | Good King Henry | |
Asparagus officinalis | Asparagus | Chickens do knock it over |
Allium sp | Onions, garlic, etc | Chickens don't eat; uprooting depends on its root establishment. It helps that we get lots of coop scrap alliums; the chickens can only kill so many volunteers. |
Solanum tuberosum | Potato | Ditto on lots of potatoes from coop scraps. |
Malva sp | Mallows | |
Aachilea millefolium | Yarrow | |
Helianthus maximilianii | Maximillian sunflower | |
Angelica archangelica | Angelica | Not sure yet whether these biennials can maintain themselves via self-seeding |
Levisticum officinale | Lovage | |
Armoracia rusticana | Horseradish | |
Petasites japonicus | Fuki | |
Urtica dioica | Nettles | |
Phyllostachys sp | Bamboo | |
Tropaeolum tuberosum | Mashua | |
Foeniculum vulgare | Fennel | |
Houttuynia cordata | Hot tuna |
Chicken Fodder Plants
One tip I've read is to watch wild birds for what they like to eat. Plants our chickens like to eat:
Latin name | Common name | Notes |
Symphytum officinale | Comfrey | Chickens tend to eat it to the ground mercilessly, but it generally stays alive. We're trying to establish enough plants for them that they won't slaughter them all. |
Caragana sp | Pea shrub | |
Brassica oleracea | Kale | Chickens eat to death |
Berries, fruit trees | Raspberries, gooseberries, serviceberries, mulberry, wolfberry, cotoneaster, and so many more | |
Rheum x cultorum | Rhubarb | Chickens eat the leaves, but not the stems |
Helianthus tuberosum | Jerusalem artichoke | Chickens eat the young shoots, but can't stop them from growing rampantly anyway |
Scorzonera hispanica | Scorzonera | Chickens eat to death |
Robinia pseudoacacia | Black locust | In theory chickens eat the seeds - ours don't seem to |
Prunus sp | Kernels from pits of plum, peach, cherry, apricot, etc | Need to crack them open for the chickens - smashing with bricks or using a grain grinder works fine. Also edible by humans; see my old blog entries for more details |
Acorns / beech nuts / other nuts | Need to crack them open for the chickens, or allow to sprout in the chicken yard | |
Lemna minor | Duckweed | Chickens not nearly as excited about it as our neighbor's ducks, but they eat some |
Oenothera biennis | Evening primrose | Read about this as chicken fodder - probably for the oil-rich seeds. Haven't tried growing it for the chickens yet |
Apios americana | Groundnut | Read about this as chicken fodder - I think they'll eat the seeds, while you can harvest the root. Ours hasn't made any seed yet to verify |
Trifolium sp | Clovers | |
Amaranthus retroflexus | Pigweed | Chickens don't eat the leaves, but do eat the seed. Presumably all Amaranthus sp would work |
Chenopodium album | Lamb's quarters | Ditto |
Elaeagnus umbellata | Autumn Olive | Berries of course, but the chickens also eat the leaves |
5 comments:
We got four chickens this spring and they started laying in September. At first, we were nervous (never had chickens before) and we didn't let them out. Then we started letting them out at dusk. Now, most days we let them free range in our yard. We will have to make some changes in the spring as we have a row of blueberries and a salad garden that we will have to accomodate for. Today we just got our first green egg! (All the eggs so far have been various hues of brown). Thanks for the link to the article about how to keep chickens. It has given me some good ideas.
That's a very interesting list of chicken forage plants. I have never yet grown scorzonera, but it is on the list one day so it will be interesting whether my chickens will attack it. Their current favourite is the sorrel (Rumex acetosa), which they would eat to death if they were given the chance!
This is a great post and those lists of plants and breeds of chickens are very helpful.
Thanks for such a great resource will deffently have to bookmark this page.
Thanks again.
Great list! I've put together a similar list, maybe you'll find some useful plants on there:
http://green-change.com/2010/11/20/plants-for-the-chicken-run/
One tip I've found for growing the more vulnerable plants in the chicken run is to cover them with a chicken-wire frame. The plants will grow up through the wire (where they can be browsed off), but the chickens won't be able to scratch them up or browse the plant right down to the ground.
Going to plant in now empty run--then make a second hatch for chickens to go into & eat-then plant the other run-alternating 2 runs for one coop-I live in a high wildlife area-so no free ranging-also all my runs are covered with wire--Vicki HHH
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