What breed of hen?

The Ruminant

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
Hertfordshire
The plan is a mobile chicken hutch with moveable electric netting - the chickens will follow the cattle round and hopefully get lots of their food from the insects in the cow pats etc.

Therefore I don’t want 330 eggs-per-year birds, that will need lots of supplementary feeding. I want good foragers that will lay reasonably well with only a little top-up feed and some calcium for their shells.

Which breed do you all think would tick these boxes?
 

tr250

Member
Location
Northants
The plan is a mobile chicken hutch with moveable electric netting - the chickens will follow the cattle round and hopefully get lots of their food from the insects in the cow pats etc.

Therefore I don’t want 330 eggs-per-year birds, that will need lots of supplementary feeding. I want good foragers that will lay reasonably well with only a little top-up feed and some calcium for their shells.

Which breed do you all think would tick these boxes?
Be hard pushed to beat a light Sussex I recon we only have a handful for the kids but we had some when we were kids. I’ve got plans to do similar to you trouble is we have too much else on with cattle and sheep for hobbies that cause work
 

Cowmansam

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
Shropshire
the old English game hunt out feed like there possessed lay well enough too welsummer look great but they don’t lay for toffee well the ones I had didn’t french marrans are another good forrage hunting type
 

beefandsleep

Member
Location
Staffordshire
I have old English game running about. They are great birds but I wouldn’t recommend them as egg layers or table birds, not if selling them anyway. If you don’t want masses of eggs why don’t you get a combination of free range egg laying hybrids and free range broilers? That way you get a good table bird and more efficient egg producers without having to compromise.
If you’re not worried about the commercial side and they’re there to do a job I would consider Cornish/Indian game. Slow growing and not masses of eggs, actually give you an amazing table bird miles better than anything you can buy but it will take them 24 weeks to get there.
 

Dry Rot

Member
Livestock Farmer
the old English game hunt out feed like there possessed lay well enough too welsummer look great but they don’t lay for toffee well the ones I had didn’t french marrans are another good forrage hunting type

OEG excel as table birds (sorry beefandsheep!) but they are also pretty good flyers so I wonder if they would stay inside those electric fences? The meat is on an entirely different level to anything that comes out of a supermarket and the reason I breed them. And, no, I don't sell them, too tasty for that!
 

beefandsleep

Member
Location
Staffordshire
OEG excel as table birds (sorry beefandsheep!) but they are also pretty good flyers so I wonder if they would stay inside those electric fences? The meat is on an entirely different level to anything that comes out of a supermarket and the reason I breed them. And, no, I don't sell them, too tasty for that!

I won’t argue with you [emoji6] but the Cornish I’ve reared put anything to shame. The old English take just as long but are a lot smaller. I’ve just got a new cockerel with a better breast so we’ll see if he improves mine.
I agree about them maybe being a bit flighty for a pen though, I’m not sure it will suit them. Another plus for the Cornish.
 

beefandsleep

Member
Location
Staffordshire
IMG_2570.JPG

There he is, what do you think. I’ve only got black hens and black red cocks, hoping he will give me a few different colours too. If I breed him back to his daughters I may get some pyles??
 

Poorbuthappy

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
Devon
@Poorbuthappy does thus I believe
Well, daughter does.
She is using a standard hybrid, though keeps them a lot longer than normal free range systems. Moved every day.
She wants to try some different breeds, and actually had some lined up, but bird flu complicated that.
Light Sussex is on the wish list.
Leghorn was another possibility, and a Marran of some description.
These all tend to be much more expensive than a standard hybrid to buy though.
 

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