Chicken owners seek free range in city

Marketplace Staff May 7, 2009
HTML EMBED:
COPY

Chicken owners seek free range in city

Marketplace Staff May 7, 2009
HTML EMBED:
COPY

TEXT OF STORY

Steve Chiotakis: This’ll help get your breakfast to cluck — click. And help your pocketbook too. Seems there are quite a few folks going the route of backyard chicken coup. Owners say hens churn out delicious, fresh eggs for just a few bucks a week. But we’re not talkin’ rural Ohio or the hollers of Virginia. How about downtown Philly? Where having chickens is against the law. Our wingman Joel Rose reports.


Joel Rose: At first glance, Zoe’s backyard looks typical for a house in West Philadelphia. There’s a big wooden deck and a yard extending another 10 feet back. And then, there’s the chicken coop.

Zoe: Come here girls, come here, come here girls. Look what I got.

The four birds converge from all corners of the yard, pecking vigorously at the sunflower seeds she dispenses.

Zoe: The white one kind is the ugliest, in my opinion. But she’s the best layer. And I was reading somewhere that the uglier the chicken, the better the layer.

Zoe spends about $1.50 a week on chicken feed. In exchange, she gets two to four fresh eggs a day.

Zoe: They’re really good. They just taste eggier.

But there’s a reason she doesn’t want me to use her last name. Like many cities around the country, Philadelphia prohibits backyard chickens.

Tara Schernecke: They defecate everywhere. So if somebody’s not really diligent in cleaning, I mean that’s, it can get all over the place.

Tara Schernecke is interim director of Philadelphia Animal Care and Control. She says chickens can pose a health hazard if they attract rodents. She says the birds need a lot of space.

Schernecke: Chickens are kuje little roosting guys. They like to run around. They do not like to be cooped up in a small area. It’s just not fair to them.

But backyard chicken enthusiasts disagree. They’re petitioning the city to make chickens legal in Philadelphia — just like they are in hundreds of other cities around the country.

Thomas Kriese: Chicken chicken chickens! Come on!

Thomas Kriese keeps two chickens in Redwood City, Calif., a suburb of San Francisco. He writes a blog called UrbanChickens.net, where he tracks successful chicken legalization efforts from Asheville, N.C. to Vancouver, B.C.

Kriese: There seems to be more of a push towards hey, this makes good economic sense for me to have a little more food security. I can grow my own garden, I can raise my own chickens for eggs.

And Kriese says one man’s chicken poop is another man’s fertilizer. He admits that if the chickens are left unattended, they’ll make a meal out of his vegetable garden. But he says the trade-off is worth it.

Kriese: Now I’m going to open the latch to the coop itself. And when I look in, wow — I have three eggs.

I’m Joel Rose for Marketplace.

There’s a lot happening in the world.  Through it all, Marketplace is here for you. 

You rely on Marketplace to break down the world’s events and tell you how it affects you in a fact-based, approachable way. We rely on your financial support to keep making that possible. 

Your donation today powers the independent journalism that you rely on. For just $5/month, you can help sustain Marketplace so we can keep reporting on the things that matter to you.