Poulet Rouge: For the love of chickens

About four years ago, before building a cute, understated slant roof dream coop (from salvaged wood, of course) our growing chickens lived inside our home. 

 

The backyard coop under construction

We constructed a chick/pullet village out of cardboard boxes and duct tape. The centerpiece of this village was “The Poulet Rouge,” complete with can-can chickens dancing on the facade. Then those six birds got big, and loud, and dirty.

The "girls" during smaller, quieter times

Our ladies handled the switch to the out of doors well and seemed to enjoy their more permanent domain. But then we had a situation.

Sally, one of our three lovely Rhode Island Reds started acting a little less than lady-like. First “she” started crowing, voice cracking and breaking like a young teenager and then she started assaulting the other hens: jumping on backs, pecking necks and whatnot. So, it was in this unrefined and alarming fashion that we discovered that one of our ‘sexed’ chickens had beaten the system: Sally was really Sal.

Now I’m all for progressive sexuality and reformed feminism and such, but Sal was just too stinkin’ loud. We do live in the city, after all. I tried throwing him onto the pile, so to speak, over on Freecycle but no takers. I asked around in some farmer-type circles but no luck. Poor Sal. We wanted to raise this bird to eat the eggs not eat it!

After a trip to the local library, we landed on one chapter titled “Harvesting Your Meat Garden”. With a quiet blessing and a swift offing we did just that. At one point our neighbor discovered us madly pulling out Sal’s feathers over the compost bin and shrieked, “Did you kill your CHICKEN?!” Well, yes, we did. And then we had a party, ate chicken for the first time in years and we loved every bite.

But we still miss Sal sometimes.

Biggie Shorty, our Plymouth Barred Rock hen 

Have you ever harvested your “meat garden”? Or does the thought make you sad and a little nauseated?

Update: click here to read more about Poulet Rouge (the breed not the pullet nightclub).

 

New Green Scene writer: Meet the menagerie!

Welcome to Flea Circus Farm!

It’s a bit mangy with a healthy dose of playfulness. We’ve got stripes and polka dots alongside hay and chickens. There’s an ever-expanding garden chock full of veggies and other edibles. Our hardy kiwi vine supports could double as massive tent poles. There is a friendly mutt lazing about and small children giggling and digging in the sand. The ringmasters (my husband and I) are busy scurrying up ladders and under the fruit trees trying to herd everyone back to where they belong. The flock of tiny chickens is squawking, the bees are humming and the family cat is sunning on a chair. 

My son, Judah, wearing the dog bowl for a hat and showing you a bit of Flea Circus Farm!
 
Allow me to introduce myself: my name is Christy and I will be filling in for Erika while she begins the grand adventure of parenting. Congratulations, Earth mama!

Our home is a tiny 1940s fixer-upper in Belmont with a big backyard (by city standards). And speaking of standards, we try to hold ourselves to being conscientious about our lifestyle choices: recognizing the impact and consequences for our consumption and behavior. 

Over the last few years we have been hungrily ripping out quack grass and amending the red clay that makes up our yard. As the compost and manure have spread their magic in the earth and new trees and plants have replaced the spiky rhizomes, I have been amazed by the diversity of life that now exists in our backyard! Birds have nested and returned and nested again, honeybees abound, and the earthworms seem to thank us with their sheer number. 

Our backyard when we first moved in…
Our backyard after the green took over!

All in all, whether naming the backyard chickens or knowing the names of my neighbors’ children, whether soothing a cold with elderberry syrup from home-grown berries to having our family doctor make a house call, whether visiting the farm or getting my hands dirty in the garden–it’s all about the relationships.

I am thrilled to have the opportunity to share some of my latest “green” projects and ideas as well as hear from you, dear reader, about your eco-adventures. My hope from this little platform is to start a conversation and maybe get you asking some questions of your own.

What is your latest project?