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How To: Stop Your Chickens From Getting Bored

Chicken Boredom Busters

Chickens have evolved to spend most of the day foraging. When their food is provided and they have nothing to do, chickens can easily become bored.

Does chicken boredom matter? Yes! 

Happy hens are healthy hens. Bored chickens aren’t happy and tend to engage in problem behaviours like bullying. Many of the behaviour problems we see in chickens are caused by boredom.

How to know if your chickens are bored

Some of the problems caused by boredom include:

  • Feather pecking
  • Vent pecking
  • Bullying
  • Cannibalism
  • Dominant hens guarding the feeder or drinker from others
  • Pecking at and destroying parts of the coop
  • Egg eating
  • Aggression
  • Depression
  • Obesity
  • Escaping the coop or run

In free-range flocks, boredom is rarely a problem. But if your flock is confined to a run, even if it is a large run, boredom can become an issue.

Winter is peak-boredom time if your chickens need to be kept in due to snow and ice. But rainy weather and avian disease outbreaks can also mean that your chickens have to be kept indoors. And for free-range chickens, particularly those with a small coop, confinement can cause all sorts of problems.

So if you are caught out by poor weather or an Avian Influenza outbreak, here are some boredom busters to help keep your chickens happy and prevent problem behaviour.

Top 5 Chicken Boredom Busters

Here are our 5 favourite ways to keep chickens from getting bored:

1. Dust baths

Chickens love dust bathing; it reduces parasites and keeps feathers healthy. If your chickens are confined to the coop, ensure they have a clean, dry dust bathing area.

We usually provide a few dust baths, so all of the chickens have an opportunity to use them. Our chickens prefer to dust bathe in a sunny spot and they love the addition of fresh-smelling nesting herbs!

A child's pool filled with sand makes a great dust bath in the coop. Just ensure you keep it clean of droppings and litter!

2. Litter

Chickens love to forage, so providing any sort of litter for them to forage through is a great amusement.

Fresh litter in the coop, piles of mulch or leaves, and hay bales all provide a new, exciting scratching opportunity!

If you want to raise the stakes, hide food and treats in the litter. However, we recommend only doing this in a child's pool or tub, as any uneaten food needs to be removed at the end of the day to prevent rodents, spoilage and the spread of disease.

3. A change of scenery

Anything new in the coop provides amusement, as does a trip away.

Use hay bales, yard furniture, timber pallets or even sticks, to build climbing structures and jungle-gyms in the coop. You can buy chicken swings and climbing frames online, if you don’t want to DIY!

A change of scenery can also be great for chickens. A little chicken tractor with a roof can be used to give small groups of chickens day trips in the garden or yard, if the weather permits. This is also a great way to provide foraging opportunities in small backyards and to clean up weedy garden beds with minimal effort!

4. Toys

There are all sorts of chicken toys available. Some are simple to make, too!

Some of our favourites include:

  • Mirrors – Down at chicken level, of course
  • Xylophones – These are available online and some chickens seem to love them!
  • Mobiles – We like old CDs on strings, but almost anything works. Just make sure your chickens can’t accidentally become caught in the string!
  • Balls – Some chickens will play a version of soccer with a plastic ball. Just make sure it’s nothing they can pop!

5. Food and treats

Food toys, treats and foraging opportunities can amuse chickens for hours on end and are the easiest boredom busters.

A note on using food and treats to stop chickens being bored

On the one hand, using food as amusement for your chickens mimics their natural behaviours, as they would usually spend most of the day foraging.

But it is important not to rely too heavily on food and treats to amuse your chickens, especially in the long term. 90% of a laying hen's diet should be a complete layer feed, in pellet form. And hens should be given unlimited access to their feed from dawn until dusk. Even using your chicken's normal feed in a toy limits access, which is particularly problematic for lower-ranked hens who may miss out.

If you do use food and treats as boredom busters, here are some tips:

  • Stick to healthy treats like forage, fruit and vegetables
  • Use your chickens' normal ration where possible
  • Continue to provide free access to feed for most of the day
  • Clean up any uneaten food and treats to prevent rodents, spoilage and the spread of disease

Food boredom busters:

  • Grow a salad bar and protect if from scratching with wire mesh. Your chickens will enjoy pecking off the fresh greenery.
  • Throw piles of weeds or plants into the coop for chickens to forage through.
  • Pick a bunch of tall grass or weeds and tie it into a bundle. Hang the bundle in the coop for chickens to peck at.
  • Give your chickens sunflower heads.
  • Tie a cabbage or iceberg lettuce to a string and hang it in the coop as a chicken pinata.
  • A pumpkin or melon will amuse chickens for hours, and they will eventually eat the whole thing! Just keep the 10 % rule in mind and remove the treat after your chickens have had enough for the day. In our coop, a pumpkin will last almost a week this way!
DIY TOYS FOR CHICKENS:
  • Put a few holes in a plastic bottle and fill it with feed. As the bottle rolls around, feed will come out, much to the flock's excitement!
  • Stuff bones, hollow logs or lengths of pipe with treats or a mixture of newspaper or shredded paper and treats (Kong-style dog toys will also work!)
  • Drill a hole in the bottom of a plastic bucket so that food will fall through when the bucket is shaken, and hang the bucket in the coop. Food size is important here! 
  • Almost any food-based cat or dog toy, including puzzles and ones where you have to press a button to release food, can be fun for chickens!
LIVE INSECTS

If you have a garden, turn pest control into a chicken treat by catching grasshoppers or caterpillars and throwing them into the coop. Avoid slugs and snails, though, as they are more likely to carry chicken parasites.

If you can’t catch insects, it is often possible to buy them at pet stores. Chickens will go crazy catching live insects in the coop. Just mindful that a few will always escape!

A note on light

Daylight is essential for egg production. And in places where winter days are very short, the only way to ensure your hens still lay may be by lighting the coop.

But keep in mind, there are benefits to the dark winters in climates where hens are confined to the coop. If it is dark, your hens are asleep or roosting, and therefore not bored and not getting in trouble. So if you are extending the daylight hours in your coop during winter, you will need to provide more amusement for your birds as well!

Do you have any other great chicken boredom busters? We'd love to hear about them!

Happy chicken keeping!

Rachael at Dine a Chook

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