As you know, we have been letting our chickens enjoy the weeds and bugs in our garden area. We put them out mid-morning and take them back in at dusk.

If they are there.

The first time it happened was while Michael and the boys were camping. I had put the chickens out in the garden in the morning. I left the coop door open to make it easier to herd them back inside when it was time.I went inside to do some cooking. I went out in the afternoon to check on them and I was missing one chicken. It was an Ameraucana and I was really worried that a bird of prey plucked her up from the garden. They are the chickens that lay the green eggs, which I really like, so I was sad about that and the thought of my poor chicken being snatched by some big bird.

I continued to look, praying that I would find her, all along thinking, “How am I going to explain this to my guys?” I decided to check in the coop and there she was. In a nesting box lying on an egg. Phew! I was relieved. The only thing that I could figure was that she flew over the gate and went back to the coop to lay her egg. “What a good hen” I thought.

The next day was the same thing. Chickens out in the morning and check them in the afternoon. This time THREE of them were gone. An Ameraucana and two Australorps. I headed to the coop. There they were. Three more eggs.

That night I was a little late in getting out to take all twelve chickens to the coop. Not very late, it was still plenty light out. They were ALL GONE! I looked toward the coop and there they were, either in the coop or outside eating bugs and grass. Apparently they know when they want to go home.

Here is the gate they fly over to get to the coop.

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It actually doesn’t bother me. I would rather they lay eggs in the coop where they are safe and easy to find than in the garden where they can easily be lost or smashed. All, except the broody one, come back to the gate and wait to be let in. I’m not sure why they don’t just fly over but they don’t. I go out and pick them up and toss them over.

One chicken, however, doesn’t go to the coop. She goes to the pile of fruit tree limbs that are drying out so we can burn them.

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She finds her spot and makes herself comfortable.

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She has never laid and egg there so I’m really not sure what she is doing.

Who knew chickens were so interesting? Probably other chicken owners.

Toodles from the farm,
Karen