Ben Starr

The Ultimate Food Geek

The Very First Eggs!

Chickens, round 1 (2008)

As you know, I have chickens in my backyard.  This is not the first time I’ve had chickens.  I got a flock of 10 Rhode Island Reds back in 2008, and they became famous after they appeared on The Rachael Ray Show in 2009.

On Easter 2010, the neighborhood kids were out in the park behind my house having an Easter egg hunt.  I thought, “Wouldn’t it be fun for the kids if there were chickens running around while they were hunting eggs?!?”  So I let my ladies out into the park to forage, like I had done many, many times.

One youngster spotted them first, and he gleefully screamed, “Chickens!” and started running toward them.  But his helicopter mother, once she caught of her son dashing toward one of these death machines, shrieked and fled after him, caught him up in midair, tucked him under her arm, covered his face with her hand, and hissed venomously at me, “Don’t you DARE give my child bird flu!” and bustled him off to the absolute safety of his home.

A few days later, Animal Control paid me a visit.

“We heard you have chickens here.”

“Yes, officer.”

“You can’t have chickens.”

“That’s not true office, I called the city before I got them and they said I can have up to 10 based on my lot size.”

“That may be true, but there’s also a code that says their coop must be 500 feet from the nearest inhabited building.”

“Well, there’s no place on my little lot that’s 500 feet from an inhabited building.”

“Then you can’t have chickens.  You have 2 weeks to get rid of them.”

I was devastated.  These were my pets.  They followed me around outside.  They would come inside the house for visits.  I would hand feed them bananas and watermelon.  And now I had to get rid of them.

I found an attorney who lived north of town who had 12 kids, and was looking for more chickens.  (They go through 4 dozen eggs a day.)  So I packed my ladies in a big wardrobe box and sent them off to another life.  And I wept like a baby.

After several years of pestering my city council, the adjacent town (ie our competitors) legalized backyard chickens.  And that was enough to spur the city council to compete.  So in Spring of this year, they began meetings to draft the codes that would govern our ability to have chickens in our backyard again.

Backyard chickens are not a new phenomenon.  In fact, even in urban areas with little or no backyards, people have been raising chickens as pets.  Check out this Manhattanite who has converted his balcony into a habitat for his ladies:

More and more cities are moving toward classifying chickens as pets, rather than farm animals, and that couldn’t be more welcome.  You can check out THIS website to see if your city allows chickens in your backyard.

So as soon as the City Council began drafting the new laws, my roomie Chris went shopping for chickens.  And in February, a bunch of little fluff balls came to live with us.

They grew.  They feathered out.  Their peeping changed to twittering, then to gentle clucking.

When they got too big to live inside, I built them a big sturdy pen (devoting a full THIRD of my garden space to them) and a coop, where they would be safe and happy and have lots of room to roam, and my compost pile to dig through for treats.  (At the same time, they aerate the pile for me, and they poop in it, adding valuable nitrogen that speeds the decomposition process!)

A few weeks ago, I filled the nest boxes inside the coop with hay, and put out “seed eggs” in anticipation.  Seed eggs are fake eggs that tell the chickens where they should lay.  Still, many chickens are surprised by their first egg, and they end up dropping it wherever they happen to be at the time.

This morning at exactly 11am, I heard one of the ladies squawking excited.  And I knew that sound instantly.  I grew up with that sound.  It’s the sound of “Hey, everyone, look what just came out of me!”

I dashed outside in time to see one of my Red Stars hopping out of the coop.  And inside was a perfectly formed nest with a warm brown egg inside!

The proud mama, being the first of my flock to lay an egg!
At left, a USDA Extra Large egg. At right, a pullet egg.

That’s no tiny egg, either.  Normally a chicken’s first eggs are little bitty…about twice the size of a quail egg.  In farm speak, you call them “pullet eggs” because a female chicken is called a pullet until she reaches laying age.  These pullet eggs are very cute and small.  But not my lady!  She laid a big fat grown up egg, the size of a USDA large or possibly even extra large!  I’ll bet that was a surprise to her!

Chickens reach laying age between 4 and 6 months, depending on the breed.  Chickens lay a variety of colored eggs, from white to brown to pink to green to blue to dark chocolate colored eggs, it just depends on their breed:

These are not artificially colored. Each of these eggs is a natural color laid by a different chicken breed. (Photo courtesty of backyardchickens.com)

I ran around clucking, myself, so excited at our first egg!  It is being saved for Chris, my roommate, who has been a much better chicken daddy than me over the past few months, naming each beautiful lady, spending time with them, feeding them, talking to them.  When he gets home from work, I’ll cook it any way he wants it.  And a huge thank you to Chris for picking up my slack in taking care of these extraordinary creatures, who, just like any other pet, responds to their name, gets excited to see you, follows you around, and loves to cuddle…but, unlike your dog or cat, gives you delicious, healthy food every morning around 11.

Please feel free to comment below, especially if you have chickens as well.  Chicken stories are MUCH appreciated!

35 responses to “The Very First Eggs!”

  1. Sandy Avatar
    Sandy

    My friend was deployed to Iraq a few years ago with his National Guard unit. He really felt the lack of fresh ingredients in their rations so now that he is back home he gardens and raises chickens for eggs.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Wow, what a great story!

  2. Andrea Avatar

    I’m really glad to hear that your ladies started laying eggs! As a kid, I had a couple of chicks in the apartment I lived in, but since they were chicks hatches in an incubator, they didn’t last long. Instead, in the little town I grew up in, I had ducklings, called Tos and Estornudo (I was 6 years old, so the names sounded funny to me), and they’d follow me and my mom everywhere. However, since we were going to move to Bogotá, we gave them away. Some years ago, I learned that they were an actual couple, laid lots of eggs and died of old age. So having ducks or chickens as pets is something I miss (right now, my cats would destroy any chick or duckling!)

    1. Ben Avatar

      Andrea, what a BEAUTIFUL story! Isn’t it wonderful that they had such a long happy life together? (*tearing up*) A few years ago, I rescued some ducks that were hatching in a nest at my friend’s apartment complex. Their mother had been killed by a dog a few days before, and the 105 degree heat had continued to incubate the eggs. But because the eggs weren’t moist from their mother’s feathers, the inner membrane had become tough and leathery and the ducklings couldn’t peck their way out. So I helped them hatch. We lots 2 out of 5, but the remaining 3 grew fast and strong in my backyard. I took them to a local park to teach them to swim. When they were fully grown, we released them back at the apartment complex where they were born. Each week we’d go back to visit, and when they saw me they would quack loudly and run up to me and want to be held. It was so sweet. They flew south for the winter with the flock, and when the flock returned, everyone had molted so we couldn’t recognize them (if they had returned at all). Great story.

      1. Andrea Avatar
        Andrea

        Oh man, please, don’t cry! *Hands him a handkerchief*.

  3. MsShay Avatar
    MsShay

    My BIL has chickens back in NC and they are his pets. I love to make fresh pasta with the eggs. He has one chicken that lays a double yoke egg.

    1. Ben Avatar

      That’s so neat, Ms Shay! Double yolks are fairly common in the first few months of laying, but that’s amazing that she always lays one!!!

  4. Amanda McKay Avatar
    Amanda McKay

    We had a farm when I was little, and my dad would bring home 200 chicks at a time. I would sit for hours watching them under the heat lamp and playing with them. I really miss that.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Wow, 200 chicks!!! That’s a big fluffy handful! Ha ha ha

  5. Becky Avatar

    We have chickens and we love them they keep our yard free of slugs and the eggs are amazing, I’m a convert when my husband first mentioned it I was skeptical but he won out and now we both love them:)

    1. Ben Avatar

      That’s so great, Becky! Glad your hubby came around. Chickens are AWESOME pets. So funny. You can watch them for hours.

  6. Frank Eastman Avatar
    Frank Eastman

    So, did you do the “chicken dance” to celebrate the first egg?

    1. Ben Avatar

      You better believe it, Frank!

  7. laura luciano Avatar

    Great Story Ben. My husband and I are building a sustainable home out east on Long Island. I recently blogged about Chickapalooza – the Basics of Raising Chickens and more recently the North Fork Hen House Tour. The ordinances have loosened ALOT since your insane and heartbreaking story. They are so easy to care for and make fabulous pets. Congratulations on your first EGG! Exciting. Next year we are looking to be one of the locations on the tour. We have not picked out our kitchen appliances yet and I am fantasizing about chickens… 🙂

    1. Ben Avatar

      Ha ha ha… I love that spirit, Laura. You’ll be an amazing chicken mommy!

  8. lcromwell Avatar

    As pets Ben their food is taxable,as farm animals it’s not taxable.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Interesting, Lee, I didn’t know that. (Though I know that in some places you can get an ag tax exemption on your property taxes if you have chickens.) They never ask me if my chickens are pets or farm animals at the feed store, they just ring me up. I guess they assume they are pets based on the way I look! Ha ha ha

  9. laura luciano Avatar

    @Ben — The cashier took one look at you and said, “oh yes, he is a proud dad of chickens” especially if it was this week. Did you name your chickens? I met a woman on the hen house tour who has 40 chickens and she has names for all of them… she had more than just 40 chickens and that is a whole other story… 😉 I mentioned to my husband that one location had goats and chickens. The family converted their horse barn into a goat and hen house. She has begun milking goats for cheese… so when I mentioned to my husband, “hey maybe we should get some goats” (as he is hammering the wood into the wall from the top of the ladder) — he almost fell. HA!! I cannot help myself. Oh my lord, my husband has alot of patience.

    1. Ben Avatar

      HAHAHAHAHA! Tell him that he will love those goats even more than he loves the chickens! There’s nothing in all the world cuter than a baby goat. Yes, my girls all have names!

  10. Cindy Jensen Avatar

    we love our chickens as well. We originally raised a flock of 8 chickens 3 years ago. Our dogs and cat were not a problem as they became accustomed to the chicks when we kept them inside in the living room (in a Tupperware storage container) until they were fully feathered. Now the dogs and the chickens look forward to afternoon when the chickens get to free range and we give them all pieces of bread. If we forget to get out the bread, the chickens knock on the back door with their beaks to remind us. We lost 3 chickens over the last year and decided to add to our flock this year. It’s West Side Story around our place as the two flocks have been slow to integrate. There are so many cliches related to chickens, it’s funny to watch the chicken reality show and find out what sayings like ‘pecking order’, ‘who rules the roost’, ‘don’t count your chickens before they’re hatched’ really mean.

    1. Ben Avatar

      I love it, Cindy, thanks for sharing! Yes, my chickens will come up to the back door and knock to be fed bananas. Silly girls!

  11. Roberta Avatar

    I love it! Ben, I’m pea-green with envy. Ten years ago I had my own chickens and I got such a kick out of them. I soon learned that they would eat ANYTHING. One day I had a large bowl of spaghetti sauce left over, and I thought they might like it. I put it on the ground and it was gone in literally minutes. They would semi-“fight” over some tidbit they found on the ground, running through my yard and cackling gleefully after the lucky biddy who next was able to get it. I just loved them, and eggs were just a great by-product of being a chicken owner.

  12. Dee Avatar
    Dee

    No chicken stories yet.
    Working to make it legal in my city (not urban at all). Right now, one has to have 5 acres to have 1 animal and for each additional animal another acre. This currently includes chickens. Most people here do not have the 5 acre minimum. Most people don’t even have one acre.
    Congrats to you and your lady on your first egg!

    1. Ben Avatar

      5 acres is ridiculous for a chicken. I have 1/10th of an acre, and I have 11.

  13. Erin Larene Avatar
    Erin Larene

    This post makes me miss the ducks I used to have as a kid. We had this horrible neighbor who would come over to get free eggs, but kept reporting my family to animal contol. Thankfully we weren’t violating any laws.

  14. Jamie Gardner Avatar

    I already told you the story of watching my grandfather kill chickens for dinner, so I won’t tell it again. But you are making me want to raise my own!

  15. jezziebezzie Avatar
    jezziebezzie

    So glad that “Shelbyville” allowed chickens in order to force your little corner of “Soringfield” into doin’ the same. Geeze, I watch a lot of TV…

    1. jezziebezzie Avatar
      jezziebezzie

      D’oh! Springfield!!

  16. Constance Avatar
    Constance

    Congratulations on your first eggs, that must have been so exciting. I live in Philadelphia. We don’t have large yards (mine is 14′ x 25′), not much room for raising chickens. But in my 20 years in this neighborhood I’ve seen some strange things. A neighbor kept a pig in his yard. And one day, while waiting for the bus, a huge white goose ran past me and followed one of my coworkers on a very busy city street.

  17. Tía Avatar
    Tía

    Dear Ben,

    I’m Vietnamese and watched MasterChef with subtitles in my language all the way from Vietnam. I’m so glad I found your blog, and I’m so glad to find that you’re a chicken lover like me.

    I have a question! How to you feel about the gentlemen? I have a pet rooster, his name is Tía (a Vietnamese name, completely masculine) and although he doesn’t give me delicious breakfast every morning, I adore him just the same. He’s my favorite among my flock of ladies and gentlemen chicken.

    Chicken stories… I have so, so many stories, unforgettable times with my little darling. He came to my home one day as a gift from a friend, and he was supposed to be slaughtered and eaten, but we decided not to eat him right away and it was the most wonderful decision. His name is Tía. He was such a beautiful rooster, colorful feathers so smooth and shiny in sunlight, and a specially big comb on his head and under his beak. Each day my love for him grew and grew. He is my best friend, and I remember peaceful, placid afternoons just sitting with him, reading, sewing, singing… I can talk to him the way I couldn’t do with other friends.

    My home laid on a busy city road with houses that are wall-to-wall together, busy traffic in the front, and my rooster only stayed in his coop, or else he might fly away and jump down the dangerous world outside.

    But then one unforgettable time came when my rooster was ill. I started to see him sitting down often, his legs bent suddenly like they were too tired to stand. He then ate less, bent his head often, eyes were not glistening. And then he couldn’t get up anymore. Legs were spread out, trying to stand but couldn’t. His head couldn’t bear the weight of the big comb and is laid on the ground. My Dad put him in a small box, with earth, grass and straws to make a comfortable bed. I also put some roses in. Seeing him struggle and unable to eat his favorite food, things that he used to snatch out of my hand and eat a really big piece at one time- was so heartbreaking. His skin went purple and pale. He didn’t move, only his eyes-sad and bewildered- closing and opening, his small hot body going up and down. My Dad said: One day he was being born in a warm cozy bed of grass; now he will pass away in one. I cried as I look at him, my parents consoled me, saying that it is the Circle of Life, we can’t do anything it, he’s going to be fine… But as my parents start talking- in front of my rooster- about where to buried him, he suddenly beat his wings hard and his legs kicking. He didn’t want us to talk about his death. He was fighting to live.
    My Mom gives him vitamins mixed in water to drink, and gave him a piece of cloth for a blanket. She gave him the water that has been blessed by God, and she told me to pray- pray and pray for him. I sat besides him, praying, anxious when checking whether the little thin body still going up and down taking breath in.

    God has blessed my chicken and my family, and made him come alive again. His improvement was wonderful! He gradually woke up, and it’s so unbelievable, that now he has completely strong and vigorous as when he was young and newly come to my home, Since then he doesn’t stay in the coop anymore, because he has got used to our family and was not going to fly away in panic. He would not go anywhere. This is his home, and he trust me and my family. Legs that I thought were paralyzed after the illness, now totally strong and hard, jump high, run fast, making thumping noise on the floor. His head went high, bright and proud, wonderfully red, and he crows a lot. His eyes were full of life- and such cute, lovely eyes. My Mom can see the chickens and describe their personality. She said my he has kind eyes, unlike some other roosters with sharp, aggressive looks.

    Since he was out of his coop, I spent more time together with him. He followed me, just like your chickens follows you! he and I did a bunch of things together. I love feeding him, taking care of him, watching him. He is very smart-chickens are so smart and sweet- he remember rooms in my house and he usually wander around playing. Sometimes he goes down to my mother’s office, and as he see everyone is busy and my Mom told him to go out, he goes up again back to my room, where he would be invited. My roosters also fights with his reflection in the mirror-that’s a cool thing to watch… My chicken has given me a lot of precious gifts, by what he is, by everything he’s done. And I can’t imagine me without him, if we had decided to eat him in the beginning.

    My rooster now has a lady and he has returned to his coop. He’s at my home in Vietnam, and I, being away from home, miss him so much. I wish the best for him and hope he’ll be with us for a long time…

    Thank you for reading my chicken stories. I literally can talk all day… I’m thinking of keeping a couple chicks in my backyard in America. In Vietnam we don’t need licenses to keep pets so I’m not familiar with the process here. Would you offer any guidance for a new star-up like me?

    1. Ben Avatar

      WOW! What a story. What a wonderful miracle that Tia lived! Roosters have a strong will to live. And I have heard many stories of people bonding with roosters. All the roosters I have ever known have been very mean and aggressive, but I have never raised one by hand. In my city, we cannot keep roosters, so all the roosters I’ve known were wild roosters who grew up on the farm without someone holding them and talking to them every day.

      You definitely should check out the short documentary “The Natural History of the Chicken.” It’s a lovely collection of interviews with people who love their chickens. One story is of a retired woman in Florida who has a pet silky rooster that goes everywhere with her, even to the grocery store. The rooster’s favorite food is McDonalds french fries. You can view the film on Netflix On Demand. It’s great!

      The city you live in set the laws on backyard chickens, so your first step is to research whether or not your city allows you to have chickens. Most cities do not allow roosters unless you live very far from your neighbors, but many cities do allow you to keep hens. You can call your city office to ask.

  18. studioennex Avatar

    I am SO excited for our chickens to start laying! It has been really exciting to watch our ladies grow up. I had never had chickens before so I wasn’t quite sure what to expect, but they are so funny. We only have 4 Auracanas, but they are all so different. The two largest like to curl up with each other and lay in the sun together all day.

    The smallest is wicked smart! She is way more clever and adventurous than the other three and will lead them out of the chicken run if she finds a way to get out…
    We thought we had lost her to a predator when we came home a little later than intended (sun down) and only three were in the coop, no sign of her. I was so upset because the chicken that always follows looked so lost and sad. We looked all over for any sign of her, but it was too dark…
    In the morning I came out to walk the dog and made a few chicken calls, just in case, and here she comes walking right over to me from the driveway. She must have gotten out and when it got dark, found a safe cozy spot to hide. I walked her over to the coop, opened the side door and she hopped right in.

    This chicken has gotten out a couple of other times. I swear, she is learning things. o_o I was always told chickens were stupid animals, but I don’t believe it!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Chickens aren’t remotely stupid, but many of them DO have herd mentality, so if one starts running, the others will start running after her. Chickens can be surprisingly smart and crafty. If you haven’t seen the documentary Natural History of the Chicken, you MUST watch it. (It’s available streaming on Netflix.)

      CONGRATS on your flock and I can’t wait to see a picture of your first eggs. If you’re home when it’s laid, you’ll hear all about it from your hen. She will cackle like she’s never cackled before.

  19. Heather Avatar
    Heather

    I have my very first flock right now! While raised around my dads chickens every summer as a kid ,I felt a deep bond with them.Within a month I was packing his chickens(rodeisland reds) around like most people pack around their Chihuahuas. My dad was taken aback being an old school farmer he never even thought of chickens as a pet.I even tamed his big rooster who went at dad all spurs and would squat down begging me to pick him up! It all started with me catching them grasshoppers by the jar full..these were older chickens not used to so much human fuss.

    Fast forward a decade or two I had been diagnosed w several rly horrible illnesses crohns being one of them. I had been so, sick I either lived at a hospital from 17yrs old on or a small apartment when I was older. I had ong since given up on my dream of having my own farm and just a yr ago (23 major surgeries and dozens of little apartments later I had to move in with a friend who owned a house.with in a couple months I found out the new laws allowed a few chickens but we were in a city that allowed up to fifity!our neighbors had small flocks that I watched all day from my porch..longing to have my own birds.

    I thought there is no way..even if they are allowed and my roomate is ok with me having them..if i get sick he works and can’t take care of them.well I made friends with the neighbor and told her why I had gotten birds my self.she promised she would look after my birds if i couldn’t! I talked it over w my roomate he be grudgingly agreed he didn’t care if chickens were in his back yard.(he wasna little scared of them having n never been around them..but now he baby talks to them and loves them too!)

    I had bantam chicks! I fell in love with them the minute they peeped. Unfortunaltey out of the six I got five were roosters.8 ( heart broken I knew I had to rehome them soon.I got three more girls of exotic breeds..they are all just this month due to lay eggs.three wks ago I found three bantam eggs from the one bantam girl I did have! I went around the neighborhood showing it off like i laid em my self! The chicken lady as I now call my neighbor and I share and giggle like school girls even though there is an age difference between us..she’s in her 60’s i have made it to 40beleive it or not! We both share chicken stories several times a wk and she’s just as thrilled when my birds lay eggs as she is her own!

    I am anxiously awaiting the first eggs of two more girls. My girls have helped me get stronger with caring for them they are my constant companions when I am alone all day due to being disabled.I can’t imagine ever going back to not having chickens!

    We garden together they make me amazing compostand the best eggs I have ever had! I thought I didn’t like eggs anymore but I just dont like store bought ones…I can’t stop eating my girls beautiful eggs.i learn more about “my girls” everyday. People could learn so much from chickens..so affectionate, each one is so different and yet they don’t mind..they accept each other and don’t notice.I even have a “disabled” chicken with a bent beak.she was born that way…and yet she is the most caring of them all, the class clown and since she can’t really get into scratching and pecking as much as the rest..she is the look out keeping a watchful eye for preditors..when she isn’t woofing down her layer pellets or freeze dried meal, worms!

    I have to say I loved your story and pictures…I got a big tear in my eye when you said you had to get rid of your girls because of that nerrotic uneducated woman! I am glad you can have your chickens again..it must be such an overwheliming feeling of victory and joy to know you can once again have chickens after such a fight!

    In my life I have worked with animals in pet stores and vet clinics for over 18yrs before being “forcibly retired ” because of ill health. I can say the weird “avian flue” scare in the mid to late 1990’s has not done bird lovers any favors. Bird flue/avian flue is so very rare..at the time there had been two cases in over four decades in all of the usa..and they were from buying birds that had been illeagaly wild caught..and they were not chickens! It caused a paranoia that still holds today. So silly and so sad!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Heather, what a fabulous story! Congrats on your flock and I hope those last two ladies begin laying soon! *hugs*

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