Put Your Chickens To Work With a Simple Chicken Tractor!

ChickensAreBack1Chickens arenโ€™t just for meat and eggs.

If youโ€™re used toย buyingย bland, factory-farmed eggs squeezed out of sick, de-beaked chickens in tiny cages, the price of good eggs can be a bit startling.
If youโ€™re used to buying big, gross bags of cheap Tyson bird parts from Walmart, the price of good pastured chicken meat is definitely startling.
There are many reasons why homesteaders raise their own birds. In some cases itโ€™s for the superior eggs and meat, in other cases itโ€™s to ensure food security in case of a crisis, and in still other cases, itโ€™s because thereโ€™s a simply satisfaction in raising your own food.
Of course, if you run the numbers on what it costs to water, feed, house and care for a flock, the economics donโ€™t always line up. In some cases youโ€™ll be paying MORE for your eggs than if you bought them from a local farmer.
Thatโ€™s okay with me, though. Iโ€™m not just raising chickens for omelets and wings: Iโ€™m raising them for their tertiary benefits.
Like what?
How about fertilizing, composting, insect control, ground clearing and tilling?
All those benefits more than make up for the cost of chickens.
My problem in the past is that I wasnโ€™tย managingย my birds as well as I could have. I actually gave my previous flock to a friend when I got overwhelmed with predator issues and the time involved with my writing and my nursery business.
Then I got talking with Chet about simple chicken tractors and went back to the drawing board.
My previousย chickenย tractor designs were too bulky, so Iโ€™d ditched themย and put chickens in a run with a closed-in coop. I was also dealing with too many chickens at that point, making it difficult to have them mobile.
I knew, however, that incorporating birds into my food forest would greatly help the soil fertility, particularly in the lousy sandy area where nothing has wanted to grow well.
I mused on chickens for a timeโ€ฆ then got an offer I couldnโ€™t refuse. Aย friend of mine raises and sells livestock of all kinds. I stopped by her booth at the local farmerโ€™s market to ask a few hypothetical questions about raising Muscovy ducks and then she popped the question.
โ€œDo you want some chickens?โ€
โ€œChickens? I replied. โ€œI got rid of my chickens a while backโ€ฆ butโ€ฆ how old are theyโ€ฆ?
โ€œSix or seven months. They just started laying. Look, I got seven hens. I can trade you for fruit treesโ€ฆโ€
โ€œIโ€™m low on fruit trees right now. What if I just buy them?โ€
I looked at the birds. They were beautiful and healthy.
โ€œHow much each?โ€ I asked.
โ€œ$10 work?โ€ she replied.
โ€œIโ€™ll take them.โ€
The funny thing is, when I went to the farmerโ€™s market that afternoon, my wife told me to come home with eggs. So, in a way, I did. They were just inside the hens. This is why itโ€™s really important for you ladies to beย completelyย specific when you send your husband shopping.
Hehhehhehheh.
Now that I had the birds, it was time to house them. I hadย disassembledย my previous run and turnedย the spaceย into a
junkyardย spare materials repositoryย for the homestead. I had also pulled apart the clunky chicken tractors I used to drag painfully around the yard.
It was time to build a new chicken tractor. A simple chicken tractor.
Rather than wood, I decided to make the frame with PVC. For the sides I used various repurposed wire from around the homestead. It took me about three hours to construct and about $60.00 in materials (thanks to my scavenging).
Here it is (without the tarp I use to cover one side):
simple chicken tractor
A totally simple chicken tractor

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7 responses to “Put Your Chickens To Work With a Simple Chicken Tractor!”

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