Hen Stories
Below you can find stories that the HenPower Hensioners have compiled about hen keeping from the war years until now. Use the category filters to look at specific stories.
- Accidents (61)
- Advice (2)
- Allotments (3)
- Animals (1)
- Backyard (1)
- Backyard Beginners (10)
- Backyard Chicken Keepers (57)
- Bangladesh (1)
- Bantams (1)
- Battery Hens (2)
- Berwick (1)
- Birtley (1)
- Breeder (1)
- Breeding (23)
- Breeds (24)
- Business (2)
- Catching And Cooking (15)
- Cats (1)
- Characteristics (2)
- Chicken Adoption (1)
- Chicken Drama (1)
- Chicken Memories (3)
- Chickens And Dogs (5)
- Chicks (6)
- Childhood (31)
- Children (11)
- Christmas (6)
- Cleaning (3)
- Cockerel (7)
- Community (20)
- Competition (3)
- Cooking (7)
- Coop (1)
- Costs (1)
- Country Living (2)
- Dairy Farming (1)
- Depression Years (2)
- Disaster (1)
- Dogs (1)
- Duck (1)
- Education (1)
- Eggs (33)
- Ex Batteries (3)
- Family (50)
- Farm (3)
- Farm Life (13)
- Farms (1)
- Father Son (2)
- Feeding (2)
- Feisty Fowl (2)
- Fight (1)
- First Jobs (1)
- Food (14)
- Foot Mouth (1)
- Fowl Fiascos (14)
- Fox Attacks (1)
- Free Range (2)
- Friendly Fowl (19)
- Funny Fowl (2)
- Games (1)
- Gateshead (4)
- Geese (1)
- Generations (1)
- Great Escapes (14)
- Hatching (6)
- Heads (2)
- Health (2)
- Helping (1)
- Hen Feed (1)
- Hen History (1)
- Hen Houses (9)
- Hen Welfare (1)
- Henployment (6)
- Hill Farmer (1)
- Hobby (12)
- Home Remedies (1)
- Incubators (4)
- Innards And Out (1)
- Judging (6)
- Lay Experts (20)
- Laying (1)
- Mischief (17)
- Modernisation (1)
- Morpeth (1)
- Mr Fox (6)
- Names (12)
- Necking (5)
- Newcastle (1)
- North Tyneside (1)
- Northumberland (1)
- Observing (2)
- Online (1)
- Pampered Poultry (1)
- Pecking (7)
- Pecking Stories (1)
- Pensioners (1)
- Personalities (12)
- Petting Farm (1)
- Plucking (1)
- Plucky Poultry (26)
- Poorly Poultry (4)
- Poultry Club (1)
- Poultry Pals (5)
- Poultry Parents (1)
- Poultry Passing (3)
- Poultry Passing On (2)
- Poultry Pets (38)
- Poultry Shows (17)
- Prizes (2)
- Proffesionals (1)
- Rationing (6)
- Rehoming (1)
- Relaxation (1)
- Rescue (11)
- Routine (1)
- Rural Life (2)
- School (1)
- Self Sufficiency (12)
- Selling (2)
- Set Ups (1)
- Showing (10)
- Small Holding (1)
- Social (2)
- Standards (5)
- Stockton (4)
- Style (1)
- Sustainability (18)
- Therapeutic (1)
- War Years (10)
- Wellbeing (1)
- Wing Clipping (1)
- Winning (1)
- Wish Bones (1)
- Working With Poultry (1)
- Yorkshire (1)
- Younger Generation (1)
Paul Perryman
Julie and Andrew Snell
Mr and Mrs Ritson
Claire Guest
I'm the partner of someone who keeps chickens. He kept chicks as a child and asked if we could have some on the farm. It was 'No, no... well okay', and now I'm a chicken widow. The chickens have taken over.
We were given an egg at the westmorland county show and put it under a broody hen. A very small, black bantam cockerel was the result and we took it to all of the local shows. It was the first one we hatched and reared ourselves.
I had to go to the Scottish National Show last weekend with the Modern Game as my partner was on milking duty. We won first price, best opposite sex.
I'm quite new at the game and only really stand in when needed.
Elizabeth Skelton
We had a children's petting farm pre foot and mouth and during that time we used to have a lot of young children and school children to view the animals. One of the things that we did was to collect the eggs and I have to say, if there were lots and lots of children there we cheated because one lot would collect the eggs and then we'd have to put them all back. Then the next lot would collect them so some of these eggs went round and round for days.
We used to have a selection of eggs in a tray and ask the children if they could identify them and guess which birds they came from... we'd have trick questions like 'who do you think laid this?' 'oh it was the peacock' 'no no definitely not because peacocks are all male, and peahens are girls'.
We'd explain how incubators work and how to bring them up to the right temperature and about automatic incubators that turn them, or manual ones that you turn yourself and have to mark noughts and crosses on the shells - every day you turn them over. Anyway, one lady was there and I explained that one of the reasons we turn them is so that the developing hen moves in the shell, so you don't get one arm big, one leg growing behind it's back, that sort of thing. And this woman said 'do you know love, I've been turning eggs for 50 years and I never knew why!' She was told to go and do it and she went and did it, no question!
W. Robinson
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