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Project Summary
Investigator: Connie Lemley
Project Advisor: Thomas Reynolds , RAMC
Director
Chickens engage in many potentially useful
behaviors such as scratching, eating plants, seeds, and insects,
and producing eggs, meat, heat, manure and CO2. If chickens
are in the right place at the right time then these behaviors can
promote the cycling of nutrients and organic matter in the gardens
while reducing the need for human maintenance of the
agroecosystem. A chicken tractor is a moveable chicken
house that facilitates such placement. The integration of livestock
into the agroecosystem also increases economic and ecological
diversity. The farmer is able to include perennial cover
crops in the crop rotation while producing another product for
market.
The chicken tractor described in this project was
designed in Fall 2002 as a part of Design Graphics and Problem
Solving, a course in the MS3 program at Slippery Rock
University. It will be constructed during March 2003, and six
laying hens will move in in late March. These chickens will
live and work at the Center through the end of the Fall 2003
semester when they will be slaughtered or given away. During
this time, the chickens will rotate through the gardens and the
orchard preparing beds, controlling insects, and trimming grass
while producing eggs for market.
The Macoskey Center garden staff will have primary
responsibility for the construction and maintenance of the chicken
tractor. The daily maintenance of the chicken tractor
includes daily watering, feeding, and egg collection, letting the
chickens out in the morning and locking them up at night, and
moving of the chicken tractor as needed. This project will
also require access to RAMC garden space, water, tools, power from
the solar tool kit for the electric fence, and space to store the
tractor when not in use.
This project will give Macoskey Center staff an
opportunity to experience caring for chickens while learning how
animal husbandry fits into the human and other natural systems at
the Center. It will provide an object of discussion and
interest for visitors, especially children, to the Center, and can
be used as a demonstration for classes within the agroecology track
of the MS3 program. Our experiences with the tractor will be
shared with the wider community through an article in the
Alternator and a presentation at the seminar series in the
fall.
BUDGET:
Garden Cart . . . . . . . . . .$99 (new from
Harbor Freight Tools)
Bamboo . . . . . . . . . . . . .$90
(Gardener’s Supply Company)
Chicken Wire . . . . . . . .
.$12 (50’ of wire mesh with
2” holes from Slippery Rock Agway)
Twine and fasteners . . . $20.00
(unspecified as yet - Slippery Rock Hardware)
Chickens . . . . . . . . . . . .
$30
Chicken Feed . . . . . . . . $60 (@ 7.50/50
lb bag of unmedicated feed from
Agway)
Waterer, Feeder, etc . . .$20
(Agway)
Electric Fence . . . . . . .
.$150
TOTAL . . . . . . . . . . . .
. $481
Schematic Design
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The concept was
developed with an understanding of the variety of uses for chickens
in the garden landscape during different seasons as well as the
different locations they could be used on site.
Portability of the system was
determined to be advantageous, and a concept of adapting a typical
garden cart was proposed. |
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