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)
Sarah Clarke
Julie Smith
It started when I was in plaster I'd had to give up a job I loved and couldn't ride my horses - it was the 3rd op out of 6 so far. I have osteoarthritis in both hands and wrists and have had them partly and fully fused.
We live in the country my daughter works while studying at a free-range egg farm, she was banned from taking anymore hens home who were injured to her boyfriends place. She fetched me one hen, we called her Hettie she was in a poor state I actually took her to the vet for antibiotic but sadly she died. My daughter calls it Hettie hospital.
I now have about 45 not all Hetties I also breed and show vorwerks have a few runner ducks. I still take in the Hetties and have a coop of limpy hens that have come with either deformities from old breaks or have new ones I splint until healed. From peck injuries to nasty open wounds their ability to heal once separate and treated is astounding. I rehome the fully recovered that can go back with other hens. It's time consuming but rewarding I remember my famous last words after finding out my daughter had been banned from having anymore hens. No way, don't ask we're not having any chickens here, lol.
Neil Watson
Jordan, 17
Linda Black
Wilfred Wales
Alex Batey, 13
I breed and show hens - I just fancied taking it up as a hobby at first but then it grew from there. Some parts of it are competitive but it is mostly friendly. My first show was just a small village one but it was a good experience.
The first chicks I hatched and reared were belgium's bantams - they were good mothers. Call ducks are especially hard to breed.
Steve Grinham
My involvement in breeding and showing began when my wife gave me two hens as a present and it started from there. The world is competative but always friendly and you feel nervous but excited.
I used to have a call duck I bought in Acton and she won every single show I put her in.... I did not have a clue what I was looking for!
Richard Toward
I'm involved in breeding and showing just for the sport of it. My family always had hens but I was the first one to show. Although my great-grandfather showed so i suppose it's in my blood and just came naturally. I just got it in my head one day and now I'm addicted.
The first one I hatched and reared was a cross-bred that won nothing! It was a silke cross. But you're going back a long way trying to remember that.... I've been keeping my own since I was 10 and i'm 23 now.
My first show was in the May when I was about 17. It was nerve wracking but I won every class I was in. I don't like being beaten so it became an obsession. You just have to have the best. Winning reserve champion was probably my highlight so far.
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.
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