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HRC99

What flowers don't Chickens like?

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My girlfriend and I spent a chunk of Sunday tidying up the garden ready for spring planting. There were winter pansies & violas going half price in B&Q, so we thought, why not?

 

So for the princely sum of about a fiver, we had some colour in our garden....for about 30 minutes before the chooks ate the lot.

 

I was wondering are there any particular flowers that they don't eat so that I know what to do in a few weeks' time.

 

I'm specifically thinking fuschias, lobelia etc etc

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So for the princely sum of about a fiver, we had some colour in our garden....for about 30 minutes before the chooks ate the lot.

 

 

I'm sorry but that made my day - thank you for making me chuckle.

 

They are devils aren't they?

 

We have an old established Rosemary that ours won't touch - but a young tender plant might still get 'tasted'.

 

Even if they don't eat them they still seem to scratch them up. So my advice is.... they won't eat/destroy the ones they can't get to... :lol:

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I'm so surprised, I've got lovely cowslips in my garden and I thought they'd be the first thing the girls would target. But no, they are still flowering and looking pretty. I think the leaves have been nibbled a bit, but I don't think that will do the plants too much harm.

 

On the other hand, my strawberry patch has been decimated. Think I might have to take Jamie Oliver's advice and grow them in hanging baskets this year.

 

I'm hoping they will leave my raspberry plants alone as they are growing quite tall already, although I'm sure they will try and reach the raspberries when they appear.

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I'm specifically thinking fuschias, lobelia etc etc

 

Yup, they'll love those! It seemed to me last year that all annuals and bedding was effectively called chook food. Our shrubs survived so if you wanted colour you could get spireas, hebes, ribes, mallows, buddleas, roses, ceanothus, choysias, viburnum, that kind of stuff, all of ours survived 15 free ranging hens. On the other hand there's not a forget me not to be seen, anything in a pot on the patio or herbs or in a grow-bag or in a veg plot was either relabelled chook fud or dust bath. All gone! :lol: Hence the big run and the return to captivity this year, feel very VERY guilty but I want my garden back and it's the only way. You might manage a garden and free ranging if you had a biggish garden and only a couple of hens but not if you had loads.

 

Mrs B

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I think you should be ok with Cactii.

I am not chinese but I called last year the Year of the chickens.

 

Our first year with the girls.

We are not house proud but the girls scoffed the lawn,then the plants I tried netting my raised beds they teamed up with the pidgeons ans scoffed the lot 8 raised beds. I got 2 leeks a galic bulb or two (smelly breath and poo) .

 

This year my Year. :lol: Have fenced off veg patch fixed a gate so the girls are invited in for a walk round only :wink: .

 

They even scoffed my rhubarb ( I thought leaves were poisonous not to our girls.)

So I believe this should lead to a harmonious year (fingers crossed) or its the oven for the girls :wink::wink::wink:

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I haven't got my chickens yet, but I'm hoping that the area that they will be free-ranging in will not be eaten. It is the top piece of garden closest to the house -mainly all year colour from shrubs - variagated weigelia, virburnun, photinia (red robin), cornus (red stemmed dogwood), new zealand flaxes, lavender, golden privet?, tree peony, azelea, bamboo, hypericum and roses.

 

However, the gaps are filled with my favourite paeonies, heucheria, day lilies and sedum. I guess they will be the first to be attacked - though I'm only planning to get 3 ex batts to start.

 

I've removed all the euphorbia seedings as I know that has irritant sap, but do I need to remove all the ivy too? I've noticed the bunnies trying to eat the ivy!

 

When I get the chickens, I'l report back which plants are not touched.

 

I've also built a walk in run and was going to train climbers up it - maybe winter flowering jasmine and clematis- would they survive?

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Mine don't bother with the ivy - I think they may have pecked at it once or twice, but the leaves are quite tough and probably bitter.

 

My clematis is fine as well - I was a bit worried about the new one, but the new shoots are well above bantam head height and they don't seem to have noticed it (I had some chicken wire ready just in case, though). Winter-flowering jasmine (the one with the yellow flowers?) is pretty tough stuff as well, so ought to be alright if you can keep them off the new shoots until it's grown a bit.

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