How To Raise Backyard Chickens
The urban farming renaissance offers a little taste of self-reliance.

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Nowadays, in Manhattan, you'd be hard-pressed to find a pig. But around the middle part of the 19th century, there were some 50,000 pigs raised on the island. Though urban farming is far less common in 2025, it still exists, more frequently for hobby rather than sustenance: Chickens are the animal of choice, with beekeeping also experiencing a renaissance.
Urban farming is derided by its critics as smelly and unnecessary. I beg to differ. I used to live in dense East Austin, Texas, and kept a manageable flock of five chickens. As a baker who makes custards and meringues and cakes, I looked at chicken keeping as less a cost-saving measure and more as a means of ensuring my ingredients would be high-quality. It was also a way to become more self-reliant, a modicum more grateful for how food ends up on my plate.

So you think you want to raise chickens! Here's some stuff to know.
- Like children, they're beautifully scaleable: You should not raise one or two; they're flock animals in need of companionship. Start with four or five, and see if you want to expand.
- The egg-laying years are short: They start laying around five or six months, and their fertility slows around 3 years old, ending at around 6 or 7 years old. They can live up to 10 years, so you may have a few years during which they're not laying, but you can't put them out to literal pasture.
- Fear not, they may not live that long: You must keep them quite safe from predators (raccoons, dogs, foxes, coyotes, even owls and snakes) and from disease. My dog attacked my chickens once, and several raccoons attempted. Nature is tough, man.
- To keep them healthy, you'll need a coop and some feed; a source of fresh water; things like diatomaceous earth to sprinkle in their bedding (which tends to be wood shavings); ground-up oyster shell as a source of calcium to improve their eggshell quality.
Some localities are much more amenable to it than others: New York, Chicago, Austin, Houston, Dallas, Atlanta, Portland, and Seattle all allow residents to raise backyard flocks, provided they're not harboring roosters. Reason's illustrious Zach Weissmueller keeps chickens in Jacksonville, Florida. My cousins kept them in Venice, Los Angeles. Most cities are fine with it!
Some—Fort Wayne, Indiana; Yonkers, New York—ban it outright. Detroit makes you get a license. Lots of cities place reasonable rules on backyard farmers: San Francisco says you can generally have no more than four chickens; Oakland and Berkeley dictate that chicken keepers locate their flock a reasonable distance from neighbors. As a young whippersnapper, I thought any infringement on one's right to keep chickens was basically tyranny; now, I'm more sympathetic to the little regulations that attempt to balance the rights of property owners with the externalities created that might piss off neighbors.
These days, I live in New York City, in the southernmost part of Queens next to the ocean where the buildings space out and the swell seeps in; future chicken keeping is, for now, a dream deferred. But I crave the self-reliance chicken keeping represents: The ability to have a high-quality protein source constantly available, to know exactly how my eggs are sourced, to regularly behold the miracles and vagaries of nature. Most of all, to feel a sense of gratitude every time I crack open an egg; an appreciation for the creature that produced it, and the work—theirs and mine—that goes into each one.
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It was also a way to become more self-reliant
So instead of being reliant on the store for eggs, you are reliant on a store for feed. You just moved up the supply chain.
Our chickens don't consume much store-bought feed. They get a lot of bugs and tasty grasses and weeds in the pastures, they get all the chicken-safe waste (wilted lettuce, the half-serving of spaghettis noodles leftover...), they get any vegetables from the garden that don't pass muster (a zuchinni that has a crack that bugs got into...chickens love them; a pepper plant that went wild and put out WAY more peppers that we can eat? Chickens. Cucumbers that are a bit too bitter due to lack of rain? Chickens.) Apples, peaches, and persimons that fall on the ground? Chickens. Wild blackberries growing through the pasture fence? Chickens love those. I even crack a load of walnuts from our many walnut trees for the chickens.
A 50# bag of feed from Tractor Supply is less than $25 and lasts about 3 months in the summer & fall, maybe 2 months in the winter (we're in the South so winter is a relative term).
My situation may not be normal for backyard keepers, but still, a $15 25# bag of feed is cheap and infrequent. And for some people, they treat their chickens more like pets than livestock, so they get that aspect of it too.
When I did the backyard chicken thing in the past they ate a lot of weeds and grass, supplemented with kitchen scraps like watermelon rinds and apple and carrot peels for example. They also wiped out all the bugs. People have been raising chickens in their yards for thousands of years without wasting too much grain.
I did give them supplemental feed though, and of course the winter up here means they can't forage so they needed food then. But it was pennies a day. Far cheaper than supermarket eggs, and the yolks in summer were superior.
.2 lbs per bird per day - a 50lb bag gets you 250 chicken/days of feed. 15 bucks a bag.
More if you feed them scraps to supplement.
You'll get 200-250 eggs/yr for three years from each hen.
6 bags gets you feed for 4 hens for a year and a dozen and a half eggs a week.
You fools. You're not using a poop hammock but you should be. A canvas tarp hanging under where they roost, lined with a painter's paper drop cloth. Easy clean up and it catches any eggs the dipshits might drop overnight.
Obviously I'm not an urbanite, GOD FORBID, but having chickens is more of a hobby. It's not a cost effective way to obtain eggs if that's the sole goal, even though I save some money on feed by having them free range on my barely double-digit acreage. Having no neighbors helps. They're stupid idiots (the birds, not neighbors) but they generally do know how to go in at night without human intervention. And roosters are more trouble than their worth.
And, yes, "their worth" is grammatically correct and I will die on this hill.
Pronoun-declaring cocks are the worst kind.
Instead of a drop cloth, we used the long plastic totes designed for stashing shit under a bed. 18"W X 40"L X 4"D IIRC. Leave them under the roosts. Remove when needed.
The birds are stupid. I get into arguments with the wifey cuz I root or the coyotes, hawks, and owls.
Does the missus name them? The only name I ever gave any of mine was Rapey, the rooster. (He didn't last long.)
Yes she names them. Some of them anyway. I also had a rooster that was very rapey. I don't keep roosters anymore.
plastic totes designed for stashing shit under a bed
Bedpans?
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Rubbermaid-68-Qt-Under-the-Bed-Wheeled-Storage-Container-w-Lid-Clear-2-Pack/1288979560
And don't think about going on vacation for a week. I grew up around my grandparents farm. I know a lot about raising chickens. That's why I don't want any. And don't get me started on the geese and goats.
Uh, how many people do you think get to take a whole week off work and travel?
In any case, chickens are crazy easy - leave out the food, a water trough hooked up to an float valve, and they'll take care of themselves for a week.
It's a polite "excuse" for people who don't like to travel.
It's nowhere near impossible to take a vacation. Not any harder than it is with city dwellers who board their dogs or have people care for their cats or plants.
Chickens are disgusting. They will eat anything. When my daughter was young, she witnessed some of the shit they would eat and began boycotting the eggs.
I will say that we haven't had ticks on any of the dogs with the chickens and guineas running around. The fuckers do like to get on the porch and shit everywhere.
Long time ago I worked with this Mexican guy who said that for fun he and his friends would jerk off into chicken cages to watch them eat the goo.
Peak Sarcasmic content.
Other websites would charge for this.
Can't get this content anywhere else.
Still not as gross as sheep. I spent a summer abroad working as a hand in exchange for room and board. Sheep are just nasty animals with no ability to care for themselves.
no ability to care for themselves
I don't have a problem with the disgusting. All kinds of animals do all kinds of disgusting things.
The aimlessly self-destructive nature of sheep however gives lamb a flavor that I can taste in my soul. Like you are doing right by the carnivore demigods, the celestial forces of evolution, *and* the will of God by consuming the flesh of the false idols too weak and stupid to help themselves.
Amen brother.
Chickens are disgusting. They will eat anything.
How is that disgusting? Dogs eat anything too. So do pigs.
Dogs and pigs are also disgusting. Humans too.
I'm not sure where you're going with this.
Pretty much everything is disgusting if those three are, and if everything is disgusting then nothing is.
Chicken poop is excellent fertilizer. So if you are a serious backyard gardener, chickens are part of the cycle. They eat a lot of garden and kitchen waste too.
Also the gentle clucking helps hide exurban traffic noise.
When there are enough of them the smell is one of the worst smells in existence.
Wow, you are all....chicken people. I may have to seriously reconsider my politics.
I've found that a low-tech factory farming methods are the most successful for backyard ventures. Very small cages tightly packed together to get as many chickens as possible laying, with a feed dispenser above to shower them with food at regular intervals, and egg chutes beneath for easy cleanup. Heavy antibiotics and growth hormones to prevent any of the "organic food" problems. At which point, outside of a regular check to replace any that die, you can probably just ignore them completely and collect the eggs.
See, the secret to backyard farming chickens is to realize that their sole utility is in providing for you.
Funny thing. Down here in the wilds of Florida, the retail price of eggs is less than the rip-off "surcharge" some restaurants charge.
Still the cheapest source of protein.
Python. You should go out and collect pythons.
I have a deal with the pythons; I don't go into the swamp and fight their alligators, and they don't come into my neighborhood and fight the Amazon delivery guy.
Win-win.
Wholesale egg prices are, as of March 29th down 55% from their peak in February.
https://agrilifetoday.tamu.edu/2025/04/08/egg-prices-falling-ahead-of-easter-demand/
Not in iowa
Pretty bird. And the chicken is cute too.
An axe, you need an axe. And a large pot for the boiling water to get the feathers off. And some kids to do the plucking. Good times in the 1970s on the farm
"round the middle part of the 19th century, there were some 50,000 pigs raised on the island."
Suburbs took off in earnest when Manhattan reached one pig per ten residents.
Is the chicken in the picture on the way to the table?
When I asked the young daughter of one of my friends which chicken she wanted to eat next - without skipping a beat - she pointed and said "that one". Adorable.