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Hello everyone - finally got round to registering here after many years of chicken keeping and almost a year with an Eglu!

 

I just have a quick question - has anyone had experience of disguising/camoflaguing an Eglu? I'm about to complete my purchase on a shared ownership property, and they've just thrown in a clause on the lease which states 'no livestock'. I can't leave my beloved girls behind, I just can't.

 

I thought about careful planting and using some willow screening, but does anyone have any other clever tricks?

 

Thanks everyone, and HELLO!!!

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Willow hurdles, and some rapid-growing plant (Virginia creeper) or similar? Surely it's not the Eglu that's your problem however - you could say it's a new playhouse for children? The Eglu will not walk about, cluck, or have a hissy fit if it sees a cat pass by ... :lol:

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You don't want to cover it too much as you need access for cleaning etc. I've got a fig tree, bay and an acer in pots that stand along the side of the run so they screen it a bit but are easy to move.

 

Or if neighbours will only be able to see it from upstairs windows how about a couple of parasols?

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According to the Allotments Act 1950, you can keep hens no matter what the lease says.

 

Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary in any lease or tenancy or in any covenant, contract or undertaking relating to the use to be made of any land, it shall be lawful for the occupier of any land to keep, otherwise than by way of trade or business, hens or rabbits in any place on the land and to erect or place and maintain such buildings or structures on the land as reasonably necessary for that purpose:

 

Provided that nothing in this subsection shall authorise any hens or rabbits to be kept in such a place or in such a manner as to be prejudicial to health or a nuisance or affect the operation of any enactment.

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The Allotment Act is often quoted as the answer but somewhere in the small print it says its only applicable to land not attached to a house

 

Even if you manage to screen the Eglu the neighbours will see you going to and from the run, cleaning it out and also hear the chooks

 

I'd try to get your neighbours charmed by the chooks personally, if its a new clause they may not even be aware that it exists

 

If you do run in to problems explain that the chooks are not livestock but pets

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it only applies to allotments

I read through the whole act (took a while! They don't make these easy to read!) and found this:

as the only kind of notice to quit that may be given by a landlord in respect of land let on a tenancy for use by the tenant as an allotment garden

Which would suggest that it only applies to allotments :(.

 

But, I would also try and win over the neighbours, coax them with some delicious eggs!

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This is all great stuff, thanks! :D

 

The screening is probably a good idea in any case, but I'm already dubious about the Allotments Act as I have heard of it being pooh-poohed by landlords and solicitors before, but am definitely going to go down the road of 'they're PETs, not livestock'. Once my solicitor has the lease from the developers I'm going to check the exact wording. If it says simply 'no livestock', I have this to fire back at them:

 

livestock (ˈlaɪvˌstɒk)

— noun

( functioning as singular or plural ) cattle, horses, poultry, and similar animals kept for domestic use but not as pets, especially on a farm or ranch

 

Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 10th Edition

2009 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins

Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009

 

And I intend to make sure the neighbours are charmed with free eggs and offers for their children to visit the chooks. How can it fail? :pray:

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