Read A Family Guide To Keeping Chickens Online
Authors: Anne Perdeaux
An afternoon feed of grain helps to keep chickens warm at night
Where did the grass go?
You should know a lot about chickens by now. Try this last quiz to see what else you discovered in
Chapter 15
.
Question One
Which of these statements is wrong?
(a) Spring is a good time to buy some new chickens
(b) Chickens should be treated for worms in the spring
(c) Hens stop laying eggs in the spring
Question Two
Which of these tasks would you be likely to do in summer?
(a) Refill the drinker more often
(b) Give the chickens extra corn
(c) Put Vaseline on large combs and wattles
Question Three
In autumn which of the following would you expect?
(a) The hens to start laying more eggs
(b) To find the chickens roosting earlier
(c) Broody hens to be hatching their chicks
Question Four
How would you help your chickens to stay warm in winter?
(a) Feed some grain in the afternoon
(b) Make sure they have lots of space to move around in their house
(c) Close up all the ventilation holes in the coop
Question Five
When should you check your chickens for external parasites?
(a) In spring and summer
(b) In autumn and winter
(c) Whenever the weather is mild or warm
Answers
One (c); Two (a); Three (b); Four (a); Five (c)
Well done if you knew all the answers – and good luck with your chicken keeping in the future!
‘No spring chicken’: A spring chicken is a young bird, and this saying is used about a woman who is no longer young. It often suggests that she is dressing or acting unsuitably. For example: ‘Gran shouldn’t be turning cartwheels at her age – after all, she’s no spring chicken!’
What happened to the hen who spent too much time sunbathing?
She laid fried eggs!
What do you call a chicken at the North Pole?
Lost!
Why did the chickens go out to play during the snowstorm?
Because it was foul weather!
Keep a chicken diary. Use a notebook or exercise book and write down your observations every day. Make a note of what each hen is doing, how she looks, whether she has laid an egg and if there are any worries about her health.
You can also use this book to keep a record of when you wormed your chickens, when they were given additives or supplements and if there have been any visits to the vet.
The longer you keep chickens, the more you will learn about them. Your chicken diaries will be useful reminders of all that you have discovered on your chicken-keeping journey.
AHVLA
Animal Health and Veterinary Laboratories Agency
Air-sac
Balloon-like pocket of air – part of the breathing system
Air space
Gap between the outer and inner membranes of the eggshell
Albumen
Egg white
Ark
Triangular henhouse, usually with attached run
As hatched
Young chickens not yet sexed
Aspergillosis
Respiratory disease caused by fungal spores
Auto-sexing breed
Male and female chicks are different colours
Avian influenza
Notifiable virus causing rapid death in birds, and potential infection in humans
Bantam
Small chicken
Barred
Two different coloured stripes across each feather
Beard
Clump of feathers under the beak
Blood spot
Blood on the edge of the yolk
Breed standards
Defined characteristics set down by the breed society
Breed true
Parent birds produce young that resemble them
Brooder
Heated area for raising chicks
Broody/broodiness
Instinct to hatch eggs
Bumble foot
Infected wound on the sole of the foot
Candling
Shining a bright light through an egg to view its contents
Chalazae
White ‘strings’ that hold the yolk in place
Chicken
Generally used as the standard word for domestic fowl (originally
chicken
denoted a young bird)
Coccidia
Parasite that causes coccidiosis
Coccidiosis
Parasitic disease that destroys the gut walls
Coccidiostat
Drug to help prevent coccidiosis
Cock
Male after his first adult moult
Cockerel
Male before his first adult moult – commonly used to describe all males
Comb
Red fleshy appendage on the head
Convict’s foot
Wet litter and mud set firmly around the foot
Crest
Tuft of feathers on the head
Crop
Pouch at the base of the neck where food is stored
Cuckoo
Irregular barring where colours run together
Cuticle
Protective covering of the eggshell
Cylinder feeder
Central cylinder with surrounding trough
DEFRA
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
Depluming mite
Parasite that burrows into feather shafts
Diatomaceous earth
Fossilized algae that damages the outer coating of insects
Droppings board
Removable tray to catch droppings from roosting hens
Dual-purpose breeds
Chickens that are both layers and table birds
Dust-bath
Dry soil for cleaning feathers and skin
Ear lobe
Fold of skin beneath the ear
Egg-bound
Hen unable to lay her egg
Egg peritonitis
Yolks descend into the body cavity and cause infection
Egg-tooth
Hard tip on a chick’s beak that enables it to break the shell
Egg-withdrawal period
Time during which eggs cannot be eaten
Energizer
Transforms power to run an electric fence
Enriched cage
Improved accommodation for battery hens
Feather pecking
Pulling out feathers
Flight feather
The ten long feathers at the end of each wing – also known as ‘primaries’
Flighty
Jumpy and easily startled
Flint/insoluble grit
Small stones swallowed by chickens to enable digestion of food
Flubenvet
Licensed chicken wormer
Forced air incubator
Includes a fan to keep temperature constant throughout
Fowl pox
Viral disease causing crusty scabs
Game breed
Birds originally bred for cock-fighting
Gapeworm
Worm that attaches to the windpipe
Germinal disc/blastodisc
White spot on the edge of the yolk
Gizzard
Muscular stomach where food is ground
Ground sanitizer
Disinfectant that destroys worm eggs
Hard-feathered
Tight feathering usually seen in game fowl
Heavy breeds
Weighty chickens that can be used as table birds
Hen
Female after her first adult moult
Horn comb
Comb in the shape of a ‘V’
Hybrid hen
Layer developed by scientific cross-breeding
Impacted crop
Blockage in the crop
Incubator
Heated device for hatching eggs
Infectious bronchitis
Respiratory disease that can damage the reproductive organs
Ivermectin
Anti-parasitic medication not licensed for chickens
Laced
Feathers edged with a different colour
Lavender
Pale grey colour
Light breed
Chicken primarily for eggs rather than meat
Marek’s disease
Virus causing paralysis, tumours and death
Mash
Complete chicken feed in powdered form
Meat spot
Small brown spot in the egg white
Millefleur
Black and white patterning on a coloured background
Mixed corn
Mixture of grains including maize
Moult
Seasonal loss and replacement of feathers
Muff
Extra feathers around the face
Mycoplasma
Common and very infectious respiratory disease
Nest-box
Compartment for egg-laying
Newcastle disease
Notifiable virus causing many deaths in chickens
Northern fowl mite
Parasite that lives on chickens causing serious debility
Notifiable disease
DEFRA must be informed of an outbreak
Oocyst
Coccidia egg
Pair/trio/quartet/quintet
Groups of chickens, all containing a cockerel
Pasted vent
Blockage caused by droppings
Pea or triple comb
Low knobbly comb with three ridges
Peck feeder
Releases food when the chicken pecks at a spring
Pecking order
Social structure of a flock
Pellets
Small pieces of complete chicken feed